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A thought I had about Jerrys Friend/Assistant/Daytime Guardian Billy Cole


A lot of people conclude that he is a ghoul, because he gets up and attacks Peter Vincent and Charlie Brewster after being shot multiple times. I agree with this assessment. He can be out in the day, yet he isnt entirely human. But I want to take it a step further. Notice they tell Jerry "We took out your friend" and Jerry responds "Oh Really?...Kill them". Then Billy eerily gets back up and approaches them with arms outstretched in a ghoulish fashion as a monster villain out of the movies of old...Now here is the thought I had. What if the reason Billy is such a good friend, servant, and guardian for Jerry is because Billys sustained inhuman lifespan is directly tied to Jerrys supernatural magic? Billy would remain Jerrys friend and faithful servant if he knew that any harm to Jerry would mean his own demise. Jerry seemed to have some control of Billy getting back up to continue battling the protagonists! Its an intereastinf theory to consider. Jerry does still lock the inside of his coffin, but that could be explained as he wants full control and privacy in case Billy is not there to stop a would be interloper of the home

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That is a precise and adept insight, scannerdarkly. You might be directly in line, as what you say would explain everything about the relationship between the two men. A master vampire, which is what Jerry obviously is, will have a loyal servant. If Billy is a ghoul, then he has the ability to appear human, can be in sunlight, drinks blood, and eats corpses. He and Jerry have probably had an unplanned meeting and been exactly to the other what each one needs. Jerry provides Billy with food, and Billy keeps people out of Jerry's way. It sounds as though you think that Jerry's death would automatically mean Billy's death. I don't know if that is true because I'm not sure that a vampire can extend his physical energy to his servant. However, your idea is correct on the secondary level because Billy is fully dependent on Jerry and might not find new assistance in time to save himself if his master were to die. Assuming that fans are right about what type of monster Billy is, the skeleton is just for visual appeal. Ghouls don't reduce to skeletons upon being killed or injured. It's not clear which one happens to Billy.

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Monsters meeting and then hanging out and becoming friends due to their shared outcast status makes sense, and it also ties in with Jerry telling "Evil" Ed that he understands the pain of not fitting in before turning Ed.

I always thought Billy curdling upon his death was a sense of time finally catching up to his body. Decomposition was finally doing to Billy what it should have done ages ago.

Jerry calling to Amy for help and it not working, making him angrily slam his hands against the roof (alerting Charlie and Peter to his whereabouts) is another piece of evidence that leads me to think he shares some kind of supernatural connection with those he turns. Whether its magic or psychic, its supernatural and we are never told why he can do these things. He could have met Billy Cole and they really did become friends and allies. Or maybe he turned Billy but did something different that made Billy not fully become a vampire. Which is why its easier to call him a ghoul. But if my theory is correct, and you look up both the definitions of Ghoul and Zombie. Billy Cole actually fits the definition of a Zombie.

The second half of the first definition of Zombie is "a corpse that has been reanimated, especially by means of a supernatural power or spell". Billy Cole is walking and talking, sentient and alive, but what if he is just an animated corpse that time has not collected yet? It explains his automatic protective behavior of Jerry, and why he rots and curdles before going skeleton, only for the final shattering before dust? With the spell undone the corpse is no longer protected from decomposition.

In Fright Night Part 2, Brian Thompson plays Bozworth an Ally of Jerrys Sister, and he is seen commenting on various insects and their names before devouring them. By the third definition of Ghoul "One who delights in the revolting, morbid, or loathsome" fits his character perfectly!

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Vampires extending their specie to others is black and white: either they do it or they don't. No one is a partial vampire. Billy is another kind of monster, and it sounds as though you think that he is a premature zombie. If there is such a creature, then you could be right, since the skeleton doesn't fit with a ghoul, which is what Jerry's servant seems in every other aspect. A second possibility is that Billy is intended to be an unidentifiable type of corpse so that he doesn't compete with the vampire and can have a funny death, if it is a death. Maybe the guy is just a goofy compliment to Jerry, who is used for intimidating moments.

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