Does Van Helsing's journal ever say the virgin has to be a girl? They try so hard to find a virgin that's a girl to bring on limbo. But aren't all the kids in the Monster Squad virgins? Just curious.
BTW I love this movie, reminds me of when I was a little kid in the 80's.
From the moment I had explained to me what a virgin is (during the watching of this movie when I was 10), that was the first thing I asked. 'So, aren't they ALL virgins?'
I think it's an unwritten law going back to the dawn of time that said virgin implicitly must be female.
I've wondered this too. When one of the kids (don't remember who) asks why Scary German Guy doesn't read it, the reply is "Because he's not a virgin." It should have been "He's not a girl."
-------------------------------- I did sixty in five minutes once...
The movie itself seems to imply that the old German guy could have worked if he was a virgin, and if it had not done so the whole "It must be a female" would have made more sense.
In most older vampire movies, the vampires only drink the blood of females. For some reason the necks of males are never good enough, it has to be the blood of a girl or woman. I just assumed it was the same kind of thing here.
This was a sticking point for me, too. Even at a young(er) age, I remember thinking "well, aren't the boys virgins too? Can't one of them read from the book?"
It seemed a bit 'plot contrived' to me that it had to be a female virgin but back in the old classic horror days, almost all of them were, I believe. And since the movie is about the classic horror characters come to life, I guess that's what they were going for?
But we couldn't get one line to explain? Ah well, still love the movie anyway.
Neville, did you say a pig was climbing up the outside of the house?
Good point, but then we wouldn't have that adorable line "is she a virshin?" They also chose Patrick's sister because she had taken German in high school.