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John Polidori's 1819 novella "The Vampyre" is widely considered the first work of modern vampire fiction. It invented the aristocratic vampire nearly 80 years before Dracula, and over 50 before Carmilla, cementing the "Byronic Hero" as a timeless literary archetype. Despite its monumental influence on gothic literature, the original story has never received a faithful screen adaptation. The closest attempt was an obscure 1992 television miniseries that strayed so far from the source material that the foundational character of Lord Ruthven was completely erased from the narrative. This complete cinematic adaptation was created using OpenFilmAI (https://github.com/skolmuirgheasa/ope.... It is an open source application designed to orchestrate long format AI video production. The primary models utilized for this film include Veo 3, InfiniteTalk, ElevenLabs, and Seedance 1.5. It is noteworthy that generative artificial intelligence was used to bring this specific story to life given the intense authorial controversy surrounding the original text. When the novella was first published in 1819, the publishers falsely attributed the authorship to Lord Byron to capitalize on his fame. This ignited a bitter public dispute. Polidori fought desperately to claim ownership of his creation, while Byron was furious that a text he did not write was being sold under his name. Byron actively disavowed the story and published his own discarded vampire fragment simply to distance himself from Polidori's work. Adding a final layer of insult to the controversy, the aristocratic and predatory vampire at the center of the narrative, Lord Ruthven, was widely recognized as a deliberately unflattering caricature of Byron himself. John William Polidori was a precocious physician who traveled to Lake Geneva as Byron's personal doctor during the infamous summer of 1816. Weighed down by depression, gambling debts, and his volatile relationship with Byron, Polidori committed suicide by drinking cyanide in 1821 at the age of 25. Upon learning of his former doctor's suicide, Byron dismissively remarked that "poor Polidori is gone".