Dracula Collection

by Bored_Dragon | created - 05 Oct 2016 | updated - 1 week ago | Public
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1. Nosferatu (1922)

Not Rated | 94 min | Fantasy, Horror

Vampire Count Orlok expresses interest in a new residence and real estate agent Hutter's wife.

Director: F.W. Murnau | Stars: Max Schreck, Alexander Granach, Gustav von Wangenheim, Greta Schröder

Votes: 105,454

The oldest preserved Dracula movie.

2. Dracula (1931)

Passed | 75 min | Drama, Fantasy, Horror

71 Metascore

Transylvanian vampire Count Dracula bends a naive real estate agent to his will, then takes up residence at a London estate where he sleeps in his coffin by day and searches for potential victims by night.

Directors: Tod Browning, Karl Freund | Stars: Bela Lugosi, Helen Chandler, David Manners, Dwight Frye

Votes: 58,647

"The strength of the vampire is that people will not believe in him"

Although it is not the first screen adaptation of "Dracula", it is the first that became a legend. It's not frightening jumpy type of horror, but relies more on the building of dark and scary atmosphere. End of the movie is unfortunately pretty weak, but Bela Lugosi is probably the best Dracula in the movie history.

7/10

3. Drácula (1931)

Unrated | 104 min | Drama, Fantasy, Horror

Centuries-old vampire Dracula preys upon the innocent Eva and her friends.

Director: George Melford | Stars: Carlos Villarías, Lupita Tovar, Barry Norton, Pablo Álvarez Rubio

Votes: 5,105

Disappointment

Before I begin, I want to distance myself - I did not see the whole movie and everything I'll write here is based on around half an hour I did see and information from those who did watch the whole thing. For the same reason, I will not rate it. That 5/10 on IMDb is only because I want it to appear in my rating list.

This is not a Spanish movie. This is an American movie by Universal studio made in the Spanish language. Back then they did not use subtitles, but they made movies for each language separately. Browning's "Dracula" with Lugosi and Melford's "Dracula" with Avalos are basically the same movie. They were made by the same script, with the same scenery, same costumes, same equipment in the same studio, literally at the same time, just with different actors and director. They fix studio for particular scenes and then "English" crew shoot during the day and, when they are done, "Spanish" crew takes over for the night. Some fans claim it to be better than original, because the crew had a chance to watch the shooting of "English" version, learn on their mistakes and improve own version. Also, "Spanish" version is a bit longer with more dialogues and has better directing in the few scenes.

But, half an hour of extra length, more dialogue and potentially better director do not make a movie better by themselves. There are two reasons I gave up on this movie after half an hour and then fast forwarded through the rest with a few casual stops. This movie is almost scene by scene and word by word copy of the "English" version that I saw just a few weeks ago, and in almost every aspect it is worse than original, so I was extremely bored by it. Acting is lousy and sad. They had different nations of actors that spoke different and corrupted dialects of Spanish in the same dialogues. On top of that Melford did not speak or even understand Spanish at all. Besides directing camera, directing includes directing of actors and dialogues too, and that is not possible if the director does not understand them.

All in all, bad acting, bad Spanish and 90% of the movie already seen in much better Browning's version make this movie good only for avoiding. I recommend it only to hardcore fans of the original movie, only as a curiosity because of additional and few better-directed scenes, and to Spanish speakers because of quirky usage of language that could be entertaining to native speakers.

4. Mark of the Vampire (1935)

Passed | 60 min | Horror, Mystery

When a nobleman is murdered, a professor of the occult blames vampires, but not all is what it seems.

Director: Tod Browning | Stars: Lionel Barrymore, Elizabeth Allan, Bela Lugosi, Lionel Atwill

Votes: 5,581

Unexpected twist

If you watch this movie, which I warmly recommend, in the beginning, you will have an impression of one more out of the countless similar adaptation of classic Dracula scenario. Though one of the better ones. Lugosi as Count is unsurpassed, Carol Borland as Luna sets standards for Vampira/Elvira, and everyone else is on the level too. However, I saw that story million times and, no matter how good it is, after a while it becomes boring and I was thinking to give up on this one. But Count was not named Dracula and none of the other characters had names that we are used to and that intrigued me. Soon, the story started to deviate from the classic Dracula scenario, leading us to a completely unexpected twist. I was sincerely surprised and thrilled with new development when I realized this is not classic horror-Dracula, but thriller instead. And from the angle of viewers back then it was maybe even mindfuck. I had no idea they had this type of movies back then. Really pleasant refreshment in the sea of similar movies from that era.

9/10

5. Dracula's Daughter (1936)

Unrated | 71 min | Drama, Fantasy, Horror

When Countess Marya Zaleska appears in London, mysterious events occur that lead Dr. Von Helsing to believe that the Countess must be a vampire.

Director: Lambert Hillyer | Stars: Otto Kruger, Gloria Holden, Marguerite Churchill, Edward Van Sloan

Votes: 8,014

Sequel to "Dracula" (1931)

Pleasant surprise. I expected a horror in '30s style and got a decent drama instead. This movie is not similar to most of the classic horrors from that era. It's just an hour long, there's very little action and no special effects at all. Nothing spectacular, but very enjoyable to watch. It has a good atmosphere and it is not tiring at all. I really enjoyed it and, however silly it could sound, I think it's better than famous "Dracula" from 1931, which is a direct prequel to this movie ("Daughter" begins with the ending scene of "Dracula").

7,5/10

6. Son of Dracula (1943)

Unrated | 80 min | Drama, Fantasy, Horror

When Katherine, a beautiful Southern girl obsessed with thoughts of eternal life, invites Count Alucard to come to her mansion in the U.S., she unleashes a Pandora's box of horror on unsuspecting relatives and neighbors.

Director: Robert Siodmak | Stars: Lon Chaney Jr., Robert Paige, Louise Allbritton, Evelyn Ankers

Votes: 6,199

I did not have big expectations, because title itself sounds like cheap attempt to turn Dracula into lousy franchise. After Dracula there were bunch of movies like Daughter of Dracula, son of Dracula, House of Dracula and such. It sounds ridiculous, isn't it... But this movie is really good. For a start, it is not classic horror movie, but more of a thriller based on horror foundations of legendary Count. Beside good plot and even better twist, movie has, for its time, excellent special effects. Dracula's transformations from human for to bat or mist and back isn't just implied like before, but directly and convincingly shown on screen. Acting and directing are on high level and overall atmosphere is great. For 40's movie this is really really good.

8/10

7. House of Frankenstein (1944)

Passed | 71 min | Fantasy, Horror, Sci-Fi

A deranged scientist escapes from prison and recruits Dracula, Frankenstein's monster and the Wolf Man to get revenge on his behalf.

Director: Erle C. Kenton | Stars: Boris Karloff, Lon Chaney Jr., J. Carrol Naish, John Carradine

Votes: 7,722

A bit crowded, but good enough

I ran into this movie following the list of all Dracula movies, but this one is part of Frankenstein franchise, and really it is both and neither, because both monsters have just extended cameo appearances in it. The story is in fact about a crazy scientist who wants to continue work of doctor Frankenstein and get revenge to people who put him in jail. He has the assistance of hunchback Daniel, a character that, under different names, appears in most of the horror flicks, sometimes as Dracula's assistant Igor, sometimes as an assistant of mad doctors. On their way they find and get back to life Frankenstein's monster, Count Dracula and Wolf-man. After the success of the movie with Frankenstein and Wolf-man together, authors decided to go step further and treat us with three monsters in the same movie (five if we count mad scientist and hunchback). Plus they added a young gypsy girl to spice up the story with some romance and jealousy. Many characters and extensive story are packed in a bit less than 70 minutes, so hastiness is the main flaw of this movie. However, good story and even better casting pretty much cover for this flaw. Particularly noteworthy are Karloff as the crazy scientist, Chaney in his third appearance as Wolf-man and Carrol as the hunchback. The rest of the crew is also very good. I really enjoyed it and I'll get back to it again sometime.

7,5/10

8. The Return of the Vampire (1943)

Not Rated | 69 min | Drama, Horror

When an errant bomb unearths the coffin of a vampire during the London Blitz, a gravedigger unknowingly reanimates the monster by removing the stake from his heart

Director: Lew Landers | Stars: Bela Lugosi, Frieda Inescort, Nina Foch, Roland Varno

Votes: 2,745 | Gross: $1.09M

True masterpiece

Multilayered and deeper than in any previous Dracula movie, the story is balancing between drama and thriller. Characterization has much more attention than in any other monster movie from this period, acting is solid, and camera, directing and effects are superb. For its own time and genre, this movie is simply perfect.

10/10

9. House of Dracula (1945)

Approved | 67 min | Fantasy, Horror, Sci-Fi

The Wolf Man and Count Dracula beg Dr. Edelman to cure them of their killing instincts but Dracula schemes to seduce the doctor's nurse.

Director: Erle C. Kenton | Stars: Onslow Stevens, John Carradine, Lon Chaney Jr., Martha O'Driscoll

Votes: 6,158

Disappointment

Kind of nonsense that's rarely seen. Acting, directing, camera and other technicalities, all are on the level we are expecting from this kind of movies. Really decent, I can not complain. But the screenplay is unbelievably bad. They crammed a bunch of monsters and forced them together in the same story. They did not stick to original legends, they did not attach to previous movies, they did not even think of some new original plot. They simply threw in a bunch of cliché horror patterns into a rush overladen story, that is not either original, or tense or fun at all. There's neither good plot nor denouement. It simply starts, lasts some time and ends without any logical sense. It's like they cut off random parts of previous monster movies and then shuffled them and glue them together. What author did here is not writing, it's recycling, and amateurish and lousy done. The movie is not unwatchable, but it is a complete waste of time.

4/10

10. Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)

Not Rated | 83 min | Comedy, Family, Fantasy

69 Metascore

The Wolf Man tries to warn a dimwitted porter that Dracula wants his brain for Frankenstein monster's body.

Directors: Charles Barton, Walter Lantz | Stars: Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Lon Chaney Jr., Bela Lugosi

Votes: 19,567 | Gross: $4.80M

Entertaining

This line is already a cliché, but here we go again - for its time and genre this movie is a real gem. Once again we have Lugosi as Dracula, Chaney as Wolfman and Frankenstein monster all together in one movie, but this time, instead of a horror classic, we have Abbott and Costello comedy, and I must say I prefer this approach. It's not Oscar material, but it's 80 minutes of pure fun.

8/10

11. Blood of Dracula (1957)

Approved | 69 min | Horror

Under hypnosis, a young woman turns into a vampire.

Director: Herbert L. Strock | Stars: Sandra Harrison, Louise Lewis, Gail Ganley, Jerry Blaine

Votes: 1,534

Half of a movie...

First of all, the title is misleading, because this movie has nothing to do with Dracula or his blood. The tagline is also bullshit: "In her eyes...desire! In her veins... the blood of a monster!" This has nothing to do with this movie either. The movie starts slow and promising. A teenage girl loses her mother. Father wants to remarry, so he sends her to boarding school. One of her teachers uses ancient amulet from the Carpathians to hypnotize her into the vampire. She starts to kill her roommates and police is helpless. Her old boyfriend reads about it in the papers and comes to boarding school to find her and save her. A pretty nice plot, isn't it?! But, after an hour of the movie, when it came to speed and became interesting, when you expect at least half an hour more of some action, mystery, suspense, or at least romance or comedy, or any kind of culmination and then denouement, you get one minute of lousy ending scene instead. It's like someone cut the movie in half and then just added last minute to the first half. Girl attacks her teacher and they both die out of nowhere. The end. Real motive why did teacher did all this is unclear, and everything in the movie stays undetermined and incomplete. The movie had the potential to grow and become something memorable, but instead, it was cut in half and ruined.

4/10

12. Horror of Dracula (1958)

Not Rated | 82 min | Drama, Horror

67 Metascore

When Jonathan Harker rouses the ire of Count Dracula for accepting a job at the vampire's castle under false pretenses, his friend Dr. Van Helsing pursues the predatory villain.

Director: Terence Fisher | Stars: Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, Michael Gough, Melissa Stribling

Votes: 27,977

One more movie about Count Dracula. This time it is not remake of some of its predecessors, nor the original story inspired by Dracula. This one is direct, although not literal, adaptation of cult classic by Bram Stoker. Authors gave their best to turn this cult novel into unexciting, even boring, movie. I'm confused by the choice of actresses. If they couldn't find three girls that will be convincing in their roles, they could at least find three with breathtaking looks. Those they took are neither. First one is ugly and other two, although much better looking, are very unconvincing. Even legendary Christopher Lee is totally lame in role of Dracula, especially compared to Bela Lugosi. This is probably the worst Dracula movie ever to date. I'm watching them chronologically, so I can not speak about those which came after just yet. The only good things about this movie are Peter Cushing and scene of Dracula's death, which is fascinating for its time.

4,5/10

13. The Return of Dracula (1958)

PG | 77 min | Drama, Horror, Mystery

After a vampire leaves his native Balkans, he murders a Czech artist, assumes his identity, and moves in with the dead man's American cousins.

Director: Paul Landres | Stars: Francis Lederer, Norma Eberhardt, Ray Stricklyn, John Wengraf

Votes: 1,555

Mediocre low-budget vampire movie, interesting only because of its originality compared to its predecessors. While Dracula movies so far were placed in past centuries, this story takes place in "present", in small American town in fifties of the 20th century, and main characters are teenage couple, local priest/doctor and some town aunts. Pretty much unusual for Dracula movie. Still, story and characters are undeveloped, plot is simple, and everything happens fast and easy, like in short cartoons. Movie is two-dimensional and fails to involve us enough, so there's no dramatic tension. Teenage romance won't fill you with emotions, nor will horror elements scare you. Overall, interesting idea, technically well done for its time and budget, but undeveloped, so movie fails to build atmosphere that could leave strong impression. You won't get bored, but you'll forget all about it soon enough.

5,5/10

14. The Brides of Dracula (1960)

Unrated | 85 min | Horror

64 Metascore

Vampire hunter Dr. Van Helsing returns to Transylvania to destroy handsome bloodsucker Baron Meinster, who has designs on a beautiful young schoolteacher.

Director: Terence Fisher | Stars: Peter Cushing, Martita Hunt, Yvonne Monlaur, Freda Jackson

Votes: 8,881

As they say in my country - same crap in different package. There are some Dracula movies that present original stories and even if they have no other qualities they are at least entertaining. Unfortunately, most of Dracula movies are basically the same story with variations in details, and this one is one of that majority. There are no major flaws, but it just rehashes same old story in same old way and that makes it redundant. If you never saw original Dracula or any other old Dracula movie you may find this interesting, but if you saw at least few of its predecessors this movie will be complete waste of time.

5/10

15. Billy the Kid Versus Dracula (1966)

Passed | 74 min | Action, Drama, Horror

Dracula travels to the American West intent on making a beautiful ranch owner his next victim. Her fiance', outlaw Billy the Kid, finds out about it and rushes to save her.

Director: William Beaudine | Stars: John Carradine, Chuck Courtney, Melinda Casey, Virginia Christine

Votes: 2,255

"Billy the Kid Versus Dracula"... WTF?! As much as title promises complete nonsense, you must admit it makes you bit curious... I expected mix of western and horror that parodies this two cult movies or spoofs western and Dracula genres in general. I could bet this movie is dumb, but I hoped it is somewhat funny. Even when I realized I can not find it anywhere I simply could not give up. When I finally found online stream and saw its terrible quality of both picture and sound (probably pirate VHS rip of 1966. movie) I still could not resist. And I'm glad I didn't.

Movie is not comedy or parody. It is based on classic Dracula plot, puts it in Wild West scenery, and enriches it with western elements, making plot more interesting. Story is more complex than in original Dracula and combines western, classic Dracula horror and romance in some kind of thriller. Although production is bad and special effects ridiculous, story is good enough to hold your attention in spite everything else being bad. Also, movie is just over an hour long and that leaves no room for idling. And end... to me it is awesome. Final clash between Billy the Kid and Dracula, that last just few moments, is one of shortest, most efficient and funniest fighting scenes in movie history. I had to rewind this scene more than a few times with huge smile on my face.

Objectively, this movie does not deserve more than weak four, but it is original for nine. Overall, warm recommendation to fans of old Dracula movies.

6,5/10

16. Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966)

Unrated | 90 min | Horror

Ten years after his demise, Count Dracula is resurrected by his servant and preys on four unsuspecting English tourists who have taken shelter in his castle.

Director: Terence Fisher | Stars: Christopher Lee, Barbara Shelley, Andrew Keir, Francis Matthews

Votes: 10,874 | Gross: $0.80M

Direct sequel of "Horror of Dracula" from 1958. abounds in cliches in story that switches from predictable to already seen and back. Also it has serious lack of suspension and horror atmosphere. Though, if I didn't see all Dracula movies to date, this one would probably leave better impression, because it brings some completely new moments. At one hand, coachman leaving passengers in the middle of nowhere because he's afraid to go near the castle during the night is scene everyone know by heart, at the other hand, passengers that steal a coach to continue their journey, and then realize they can not control horses that run straight to the castle is pretty much original approach. Scenes in tavern, table made for them when they arrive in castle, their luggage waiting in made rooms, scenes with Dracula and his helpers, cliches ragged long time ago. And then great scene of chase and completely original and unexpected way to defeat Prince of Darkness. Movie is full of unconvincing scenes with counterweight in fantastic Barbara Shelley, whose beauty and acting are, in my opinion, highlights of this feature. I really like Christopher Lee, but to me he's ridiculous in this role. Few times during the movie I was thinking about giving up on it, and yet I'm very glad I did not miss awesome ending.I have really mixed impressions. Anyway, it's surely better than its prequel from 1958.

6/10

17. The Fearless Vampire Killers (1967)

Not Rated | 91 min | Comedy, Horror

56 Metascore

A noted professor and his dim-witted apprentice fall prey to their inquiring vampires, while on the trail of the ominous damsel in distress.

Director: Roman Polanski | Stars: Jack MacGowran, Roman Polanski, Alfie Bass, Jessie Robins

Votes: 33,872

Horror comedy from 1967. by Roman Polanski, in UK known as Dance of the Vampires and in USA as The Fearless Vampire Killers aka Pardon Me, But Your Teeth Are in My Neck, is timeless classic of vampire cinema. This British-American cooperation was filmed in Italy and it's the first film Polanski made in color and in widescreen format. He approached this classic theme in different and original way, turning horror into comedy. Movie attracted the most attention using, for its time, pretty much explicit eroticism and implying connection between vampirism and homosexuality. Sharon Tate posed naked for Playboy as part of movie promotion. In the beginning Polanski was against Tate because he doubted her acting abilities, but she played leading female role anyway, and she even married Polanski soon after movie premiere. For Polanski, this movie opened door of Hollywood.

8/10

18. Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968)

G | 92 min | Drama, Fantasy, Horror

66 Metascore

After a Monsignor accidentally brings Count Dracula back from the dead while exorcising his castle, the vampire preys on the holy man's beautiful niece and her friends.

Director: Freddie Francis | Stars: Christopher Lee, Rupert Davies, Veronica Carlson, Barbara Ewing

Votes: 8,193

By itself, this is one of better Hammer movies. From movie to movie improvement in every aspect is obvious, from screenplay, to scenography, effects, directing and acting. At the other hand, this is God knows how many in a row Dracula movie that recycles same old plot, and does not offer much novelty. Although this one has bit different approach and some new details, like symbolism of the doll on Maria's bed, essentially it's same crap in different package. And that really starts to bore...

6/10

19. Blood of Dracula's Castle (1969)

M | 84 min | Horror

Count Dracula and his wife capture beautiful young women and chain them in their dungeon, to be used when they need to satisfy their thirst for blood.

Directors: Al Adamson, Don Hulette | Stars: John Carradine, Paula Raymond, Alexander D'Arcy, Robert Dix

Votes: 1,293

Considering budget of just 50.000 $ this is not so terribly, bad, but how and why did I see it through to the very end remains mystery...

4/10

20. Count Dracula (1970)

PG | 98 min | Drama, Horror

Count Dracula, a vampire who regains his youth by drinking the blood of maidens, is pursued in London and Transylvania by Professor Van Helsing, Jonathan Harker and Quincey Morris.

Director: Jesús Franco | Stars: Christopher Lee, Herbert Lom, Klaus Kinski, Maria Rohm

Votes: 3,800

This movie is terribly underrated. Up to its time, Count Dracula by Jesus Franco is definitely the most faithful and the most convincing adaptation of Bram Stoker. Story wasn't identical, but it was the closest thing to original novel they made so far. Scenery, sound, directing, complete approach is strange and different than what we were used to see in this genre. Instead of fairytale-like, fantasy atmosphere typical for horrors those days, here we have illusion of real life. Cast is particularly striking. Count Dracula is played by legendary Christopher Lee, actor who appeared in about three hundred movies and who's played Dracula more times than anyone else. In 1970. he played Dracula four times and this is the only movie that shows Dracula with facial hair. Also, this is the first Dracula movie in which Dracula starts as old man and gets younger by drinking blood. Klaus Kinski, father of Nastassja Kinski and actor who left us around 150 movies (Marquis de Sade in Marquis de Sade's Justine, hunchback in For a Few Dollars More), nailed role of Reinfield although he has no lines at all. He entered the role of madman so deep that in scenes where Reinfield eats insects he ate real flies instead of fake ones. Some time after Reinfield becomes Dracula in 1979. Nosferatu the Vampyre. Role of Van Helsing was meant for Vincent Price, but it ended up with Herbert Lom (Chief Insp. Charles Dreyfus from Pink Panter series). And in the role of Lucy we have tragically deceased Soledad Miranda, beautiful member of "Club 27". Although very unusual for its genre, or maybe exactly because of it, this movie left strong impression on me.

8/10

21. Scars of Dracula (1970)

R | 95 min | Horror

A young man is murdered while spending the night at Count Dracula's castle, prompting his brother to come to the small town where all the traces end to look for him.

Director: Roy Ward Baker | Stars: Christopher Lee, Dennis Waterman, Jenny Hanley, Christopher Matthews

Votes: 6,397

I have very opposite impressions about this flick. It is one of the best and, at the same time, one of the worst Dracula movies. Let's start with its positive attributes. When you see dozens of Dracula movies, like I did, after a while pouring sand in the desert becomes tiresome. Truth to be told, there are some that bounce from the classic template, and even some surprisingly original ones, but the vast majority play an identical story with slight variations. This one is quite interesting. It does not stick to the basic plot that we are accustomed to, Dracula doesn't kidnap a girl, there's no professional vampire killers, characters are much more interesting than in most of previous films, and writers have managed to find a way to kill Dracula in the original way with which we have not met before, without getting stupid. Also, movie is the most aggressive and the bloodiest so far. At the other hand, scenography and effects are very bad. Acting is good, but everything else is unconvincing, especially tragicomic bats and scenery that's supposed to be a castle. The only exception is a scene of massacre in the church, which is quite disturbing. Further, even though I have great love for breasts, I think that the big flaw of this film is that the camera incomparably more focuses on boobs of every single female character than on Dracula. Judging by the screen time they occupy in comparison to Dracula, they should be given names and be placed in front of Christopher Lee in ending credits. Recommendation to Hammer fans only.

6/10

22. Taste the Blood of Dracula (1970)

R | 91 min | Drama, Fantasy, Horror

After killing his disciple, three English gentlemen unwittingly resurrect Count Dracula, who seeks to avenge his servant by making the trio die by the hands of their own children.

Director: Peter Sasdy | Stars: Christopher Lee, Geoffrey Keen, Gwen Watford, Linda Hayden

Votes: 6,883

The best Hammer Dracula so far. Story picks up where "Dracula Has Risen from the Grave" has left. It has nothing to do with Stoker's classic or with any previous Dracula film. Christopher Lee in the role of Count is rather minor figure and more someone who controls things from shadows than actually appears in the film. Acting, costumes, scenery and overall atmosphere are peak of Hammer production. Story is original, interesting and m ore a thriller than a horror.

7/10

!!! SPOILER ALERT !!!

Traveling merchant accidentally encounters Dracula's death (end of "Dracula Has Risen from the Grave") and decides to keep his cape, medallion, ring and some blood. An indefinite period of time later we see three rich middle-aged gentlemen, devoured by boredom of business and family life, who once a month seek refuge from the lives of prominent citizens by meeting in a whore house. There they meet occultist who offers them to sell their souls to the devil. They buy Dracula's things from merchant and perform ritual to resurrect Dracula. But during the ceremony they panic and kill the occultist. Dracula revives and decides to revenge his servant by forcing the children of these three to kill their fathers. One of those three has son and daughter who are in secret relationships with daughter and son of other two, which additionally complicates the plot. If you liked any of previous Hammer flicks, you'll love this one.

23. Dracula vs. Frankenstein (1971)

GP | 91 min | Horror, Sci-Fi

Dracula conspires with a mad doctor to resurrect the Frankenstein Monster.

Directors: Al Adamson, Samuel M. Sherman | Stars: J. Carrol Naish, Lon Chaney Jr., Zandor Vorkov, Anthony Eisley

Votes: 2,246

Frank Zappa joined KISS vs. Frankenstein

Every decade has its own specific atmosphere. As B production of the 1980s is recognizable at first glance, so the atmosphere of this film is simply screaming 1970s. They say this film is so bad it's good. I wouldn't agree. Although the idea is quite original and the story is somewhat decent, this is an extremely cheap, amateur-directed and mounted movie and acting is terrible. One of those movies where the boobs of main actress are the only thing worth watching, and since you will not see them, better skip.

2,5/10

Pictures of Panda-Dracula, a formless mass that should represent Frankenstein's monster and the most explicit view of Regina Carrol's tits you can easily find on Google Pictures, so you'll know what I'm talking about.

24. Blacula (1972)

PG | 93 min | Fantasy, Horror, Romance

An 18th-century African prince, turned into a vampire by Dracula, finds himself in modern-day Los Angeles.

Director: William Crain | Stars: William Marshall, Vonetta McGee, Denise Nicholas, Thalmus Rasulala

Votes: 7,865 | Gross: $3.00M

At the end of the 18th century, the African prince comes to Europe to negotiate the abolition of slavery. After receiving, he remains a guest at the Count Dracula's castle, who kills his wife and turns him into a vampire. Two centuries later, in Los Angeles, he encounters a girl he believes is the incarnation of his wife. The story is quite original, full of interesting details and well-told, but everything else in the movie is cheap (budget $ 500,000), lousy and unconvincing. There is a lot of idling and a good part of the movie we watch club performances of the soul band "The Hues Corporation." The film was, at least to me, mostly boring, and it does not deserve more than four, but for the quality story I will honor it with

5/10

25. Dracula A.D. 1972 (1972)

PG | 96 min | Horror

In 1972 London - a century after his final battle with Professor Van Helsing - Count Dracula is resurrected by occultist Johnny Alucard, and goes after his archenemy's descendants.

Director: Alan Gibson | Stars: Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Stephanie Beacham, Christopher Neame

Votes: 7,444

The seventh in the series of Hammer vampire films is refreshed by placing the action in the present, specifically in 1972. Naive satanist, thirsty for power and immortality, performs the ritual and revives Count exactly 100 years after Van Helsing killed him, and Dracula moves to take revenge on Van Helsing family. The main roles are again performed by Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing, and there are also a few hippie beauties. The acting and directing are satisfying, and the first half of the film has a strong seal of the seventies. The music is totally inappropriate for the genre, but all together it is quite fun. In the second half things go downhill and the movie turns into a bad vampire cliché. All in all, a movie worth watching once.

7/10

26. Daughter of Dracula (1972)

Not Rated | 87 min | Horror, Mystery

Luisa visits her dying mother at Karlstein Castle. Before she dies, she tells Luisa that the Karlsteins are a family of vampires and that her ancestor, the original Count Karlstein, lies buried in the crypt.

Director: Jesús Franco | Stars: Carmen Yazalde, Anne Libert, Alberto Dalbés, Daniel White

Votes: 747

Good chicks in a bad movie (aka smeće kakvo se retko sreće)

Some actresses are able to somewhat save some bad movies with their mesmerizing beauty, but this lesbian soft-porn, clumsily masked as horror about Dracula, is so bad that it couldn't be saved even by sex scene between Jessica Alba and Charlize Theron. I could get over the fact that vampires in the movie don't have any issues with daylight, but if somebody told me that a scene in which camera slides down the naked body of a beautiful woman could be boring I would think he's crazy. If you are a fan of horror, Dracula or good soft-porn, avoid this misery in a wide arc, but if you want to watch five minutes of to blur zoomed tongue and a nipple this is the right movie for you.

3/10

27. Scream Blacula Scream (1973)

PG | 96 min | Fantasy, Horror

40 Metascore

The vampire Mamuwalde (a.k.a. Blacula) is resurrected by voodoo and forced to kill again.

Director: Bob Kelljan | Stars: William Marshall, Don Mitchell, Pam Grier, Michael Conrad

Votes: 3,059 | Gross: $2.18M

Once again it has been shown that the sequences can be better than the original. Although "Scream Blacula Scream" isn't scary at all, unlike most of such movies it isn't stupid. It has a fairly well-written story, with a moderate amount of humor and interesting characters. The acting is good, music is even better, and movie keeps your attention from start to finish. It's not effective as horror, but it's quite decent low-budget movie worth watching.

6/10

28. The Satanic Rites of Dracula (1973)

R | 87 min | Horror

In 1974, Professor Lorrimer Van Helsing investigates a satanic cult on behalf of Scotland Yard, only to discover a plot by Count Dracula to commit global genocide.

Director: Alan Gibson | Stars: Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Michael Coles, William Franklyn

Votes: 6,939

Although it's Hammer movie about Dracula, with Christopher Lee in the lead role, this is not a horror but a conspiracy crime thriller. Nevertheless, despite the original approach to the topic, an interesting idea and a good cast, the film is quite boring.

5/10

29. Blood for Dracula (1974)

R | 106 min | Horror

An ailing vampire count travels to Italy with his servant to find a bride.

Director: Paul Morrissey | Stars: Joe Dallesandro, Udo Kier, Vittorio De Sica, Maxime McKendry

Votes: 6,586 | Gross: $0.28M

Almost unwatchable, but worth watching

I think Andy Warhol had nothing to do with "Blood for Dracula" aka "Andy Warhol's Dracula" except for allowing it to use his name. This mildly politicized erotic horror comedy has a pretty good story and pleasant music, but everything else is very bad. One could eventually get used to bad acting, but the acting and especially pronunciation of the English language of the vast majority of actors are at the level of low-budget porn and so painful to ears that it makes the film almost unwatchable. During the first half an hour, I was on the verge of giving up, but later the story became more and more interesting and even brought a few really exquisite moments. The scenes where Dracula gets sick from drinking blood of the sluts, as well as the scene in which he lies on the floor licking the blood virgin lost during her first sexual intercourse, in my opinion, belong near the top of the trash cinema, and only because of those scenes and the way Udo Kier performed them I won't rate this movie 1/10.

3/10

30. Dracula (1974 TV Movie)

TV-14 | 98 min | Drama, Horror

Dracula is searching for a woman who looks like his long dead wife.

Director: Dan Curtis | Stars: Jack Palance, Simon Ward, Nigel Davenport, Pamela Brown

Votes: 2,785

Amateurish and boring

I listened to only words of praise for Curtis's adaptation of Bram Stoker's "Dracula", and now that I finally saw it I'm totally confused. This film is bad in almost every aspect. The fact that it is one of the versions most faithful to the original material is not by itself sufficient. Moreover, for someone who has watched every version of Dracula that he encountered, this is a big disadvantage, because when you watch the same story for countless times, it becomes painfully boring. This film is a classic version of Dracula that does not bring even a bit of originality, so in the sense of the story itself, it can be interesting only to those who encounter Dracula for the first time. But a movie is not just a story, and there are countless ways it can capture the viewer. This one didn't use any of them. Apart from Jack Palance, who brings us a different, unusual but very striking version of the Count, the performances of other actors are mediocre and uninteresting. Visually, the movie has no major flaws, but there's nothing to praise either. I did not like the directing, the pace is too slow, and the general atmosphere is plain boring. It is not scary, nor tense, nor dramatic, and there are not even traces of humor to be found. The only thing that broke the boredom are incredibly stupid mistakes in the film, which are so obvious that the only reasonable explanation for their presence is that the makers simply didn't care at all to put some effort in it. The film places the Bulgarian city of Varna and Romanian Transylvania in Hungary, and when, at the beginning of the film, Jonathan arrives at the Dracula's castle in Transylvania, Hungary, Hungarians speak Russian. There are more stupid mistakes that you can easily notice, if you decide to waste your time on this movie, but there's no need to list them, because this alone is enough to shut down the movie. Although it has no influence on the story itself, it represents amateurism, lack of education and laziness of the creators, on the basis of which I assumed that other aspects of the film will be at a low level too. And I was right.

4/10

31. The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires (1974)

R | 89 min | Action, Horror

In China, Professor Van Helsing helps eight kung fu-trained siblings reclaim their ancestral mountain village, now the domain of seven powerful vampires and their army of undead slaves.

Directors: Roy Ward Baker, Cheh Chang | Stars: Peter Cushing, David Chiang, Julie Ege, Han-Chen Wang

Votes: 4,937

Count-Fu Dracula

The story is original, interesting and nicely developed. The mixture of the classic "Van Helsing vs. Dracula" plot with Chinese kung-fu movies was, at least for me, something completely new, it held my attention and entertained me well. But the movie simply screams "seventies." A potentially top-notch horror adventure disrupts the frivolous atmosphere typical of the B production of this period. Constant overacting and masks and requisites, which look as if they were purchased from the Chinese department store for kids' toys, do not allow you to fully experience the adventure, because the scenes on the screen for a good part of the film leave an impression of silly parody. And on the army of the undead and their bouncing around better not to comment. This is the only film about Dracula from Hammer Films that does not contain the name of Dracula in its title and the only one in which Dracula is not played by Christopher Lee, who turned down the role after reading the script. Also, this film claims that Dracula has spent the whole century, from 1804 to 1904, in China, which is contradictory to the timeline of other Hammer films about the famous vampire. However, originality and strangeness of the story, directing in which you can feel the influence of Kurosawa and Leone (or at least it seemed so to me) and overall fun atmosphere distinguish this film from the rest of the franchise and make it one of the most interesting Hammer productions. It is worth a look.

7/10

32. Dracula and Son (1976)

PG | 78 min | Comedy, Horror

In the 1700s, a vampire has a son from a normal woman. The mother dies, and he spends two centuries trying to teach his meek son how to be a proper vampire but no avail. Now they have to flee from Transylvania, and they end up in France.

Director: Édouard Molinaro | Stars: Christopher Lee, Bernard Menez, Marie-Hélène Breillat, Catherine Breillat

Votes: 792

Christopher Lee's last Dracula performance

Having said that he would not play Dracula any more, Christopher Lee, however, once again appears in this role. Although, in his defense, the name Dracula is not mentioned in the film and his character is referred solely as the Count. Also, he objected using the word Dracula in the title. It is the French comedy "Dracula and Son" directed by Edouard Molinaro. The approach to the theme is quite different from Hammer's and the film somewhat realistically shows how the vampires, driven away from their castle in Transylvania with only shirts on their backs, manage without anything in modern society. While the son works the night shift at the butchery, in order to have access to blood, the father "plays" vampire in a toothpaste commercial. They both fall in love with the same girl, but while Dracula wants to bite her and keep her by his side through eternity, his son wants to become human and have a normal relationship. Their rivalry about the girl turns the second half of the movie into a classic slapstick comedy. Objectively, the only good thing in this film is Christopher Lee, and somewhat Bernard Menez who plays his son, while everything else, technically and substantially, is pretty bad. There's some decent humor occasionally, but do not expect that you will really laugh. However, it was interesting to see something new and different on this subject, and therefore I recommend it.

5/10

33. Count Dracula (1977 TV Movie)

TV-PG | 150 min | Drama, Horror

The vampire count leaves his Transylvanian home to wreak havoc across the world.

Director: Philip Saville | Stars: Louis Jourdan, Frank Finlay, Susan Penhaligon, Judi Bowker

Votes: 1,793

Sterile English drama

Television movie "Count Dracula" in the BBC production is considered to be the most faithful adaptation of Stoker's novel. Although faithful to the source material and technically well done, I was barely able to push myself to see it through. The beauty of Judi Bowker and the different but great performance of Louis Jourdan in the title role are not enough to compensate for the bad directing, the pace that has tested the limits of my patience, a sterile atmosphere and a complete lack of any kind of emotion, drama or horror. Flatness and boredom were occasionally interrupted only by completely unnecessary visual effects, especially Dracula's face in the negative, annoying music and some incredibly stupid over-the-top scenes, among which the scene of Renfield's death is particularly highlighted. Subjectively, I want to rate it two out of ten, but I can not ignore the existence of its objective qualities.

5/10

34. Dracula (1979)

R | 109 min | Drama, Fantasy, Horror

67 Metascore

In 1913, the charming, seductive and sinister vampire Count Dracula travels to England in search of an immortal bride.

Director: John Badham | Stars: Frank Langella, Laurence Olivier, Donald Pleasence, Kate Nelligan

Votes: 11,112 | Gross: $20.16M

"It prioritises stylishness while neglecting the scares"

I have watched countless vampire movies and series, some forty of which are related to the legendary Count Dracula, and at least ten are direct adaptations of the famous novel by Bram Stoker. When you watch the same story in too many films that differ only in nuances, that story gets pretty boring and the movie has to be really good to stand out from the bunch and make an impression. John Badham's "Dracula" from 1979, the year that produced a dozen films on the subject, is one of the most impressionable.

The film is inspired by the Broadway show and is one of the most faithful adaptations of the novel, but it stands out from the mass of similar ones because of its slightly different approach that puts style before the scares. While most of the "Dracula" adaptations belong to the horror genre, with a few exceptions that turn the story into a thriller or a comedy, this movie is a drama with a touch of romance, in which the horror elements are present only to the extent necessary to comply with the original story.

Badham wanted to shoot it in black and white, but Universal Pictures insisted on Technicolor. The compromise solution was a color film in which prevail black, white and gray, with occasional use of muted warm colors, so the atmosphere is similar to what a black and white film would have. Personally, I don't think it could have turned out any better. Excellent photography and directing focus more on the beauty of the shot than on the horror effect, and this sight for sore eyes is accompanied by original music by John Williams, performed by the London Symphony Orchestra. It should be noted that Williams has been nominated for an Oscar nearly forty times, of which he has won five, for the films "Fiddler on the Roof", "Jaws", "E.T.", "Star Wars" and "Schindler's List", and is also known for music for "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," "Superman," "Indiana Jones," "The Witches of Eastwick," "Home Alone," "JFK," "Amistad," "Saving Private Ryan," "AI," "Harry Potter "and many others.

Dracula is played by Frank Langella, who also played The Count in the Broadway show that inspired the film. Unlike his predecessors, he refused to portray Dracula as a bloodthirsty monster, refused to wear artificial fangs and shoot scenes of bloody teeth, but instead portrayed the Count as an elegant nobleman, gentleman and seducer, and his relationship with Lucy (the names Mina and Lucy are reversed in this adaptation) is not a relationship of predator and victim, but a romance similar to those of the Golden Age of Hollywood. Kate Nelligan excellently portrayed the role of Lucy, her father is played by Donald Pleasence (Dr. Loomis from the "Halloween" franchise ), Mina Van Helsing is played by Jan Francis, and Prof. Abraham Van Helsing by the legendary Laurence Olivier.

A must-watch for Dracula fans, but also a warm recommendation to anyone who loves cinema with style, black-and-white film, and old-school Hollywood romance, whether or not you have a fondness for the horror genre.

8/10

35. Love at First Bite (1979)

PG | 96 min | Comedy, Horror

62 Metascore

After being evicted from his castle in Transylvania, Count Dracula and his assistant Renfield travel to New York to find a woman who the Count believes is the reincarnation of the woman he has loved for all eternity.

Director: Stan Dragoti | Stars: George Hamilton, Susan Saint James, Richard Benjamin, Dick Shawn

Votes: 6,391 | Gross: $43.89M

"I'm a doctor and I know what I'm doing"

"Love at First Bite" is a parody of films about Dracula, set in the disco environment of the 1970s. It relies mostly on "Dracula" from 1931, most notably in the performances of George Hamilton and Arte Johnson, who apparently mimic Lugosi and Dwight Frye. There are also references to the "Dance of the Vampires" (1967) and "Scream Blacula Scream" (1973). The story basically follows the original, but is constantly twisted into a parody and filled with gags and jokes. The movie is clever and humorous, but we for some reason, except in a few scenes, it didn't make me laugh. Probably because I'm not a fan of the seventies in general, the film simply did not leave a strong impression. I had some fun, but I wouldn't rewatch it.

6/10

36. Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)

PG | 107 min | Drama, Horror

79 Metascore

Count Dracula moves from Transylvania to Wismar, spreading the Black Plague across the land. Only a woman pure of heart can bring an end to his reign of horror.

Director: Werner Herzog | Stars: Klaus Kinski, Isabelle Adjani, Bruno Ganz, Roland Topor

Votes: 40,541

"Death is not the worst. There are things more horrible than death."

The film is very nicely shot, full of beautiful landscapes, and each frame is an art photograph. However, after a while, watching beautiful pictures ceases to hold the attention, and there is nothing else to keep it. The pace is too slow and, after half an hour, there is still no indication that anything will happen. And when the Count finally appeared on the screen, my impressions were divided. Although the make-up is superbly done and in itself is a small masterpiece, the effect it achieves in the given context is tragicomic. Dracula's head emerging from the darkness is an unforgettable but not at all frightening sight. Klaus Kinski is made up carefully and skillfully, but the conceptual solution is something between the overgrown Jackson's Smeagol and the anorexic Uncle Fester from "The Addams Family". And it's quite gay. Instead of the story and the characters, the film concentrates on building the atmosphere, on the visual aspect accompanied by great sound and sound effects. Still, it lacks tension and creepiness, so that atmosphere is more befitting a historical drama than horror. As it progressed, it was becoming increasingly clear that the film is a drama. The spotlight is shifted from the horror that mortals experience because of Dracula to the burden of immortality, to the extent that at times the Count provokes pity, if not sympathy. The almost erotic scene between him and Lucy near the end of the film dangerously improved the general impression, but the end itself greatly disappointed me. All in all, my subjective experience is a strong six, possibly a seven, but since technically it deserves maybe even ten, I will compromise with

8/10

37. The Hunger (1983)

R | 97 min | Drama, Horror

52 Metascore

A love triangle develops between a beautiful yet dangerous vampire (Catherine Deneuve), her cellist companion (David Bowie), and a gerontologist (Susan Sarandon).

Director: Tony Scott | Stars: Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie, Susan Sarandon, Cliff De Young

Votes: 29,054 | Gross: $5.98M

Style over substance

The rating on IMDb is 6.6/10, Metascore is 52, but how could I resist it when the movie stars Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie, and Susan Sarandon, and opens with the Bauhaus number "Bela Lugosi Is Dead".

Ignore the description on IMDb. There is no love triangle here, and the film is a horror only because there are vampires. It is an atmospheric, slightly psychedelic and surreal drama. Although he is the male lead, David Bowie plays a minor role here with a relatively brief screen time, while the focus is on the fairly good characterization of the Catherine Deneuve and Susan Sarandon characters and the lousy development of their relationship.

The story, at least from my perspective, is quite original, but not developed enough. Although the film is slow-paced, the story is rushed and just as it started, it reached the closing credits. The acting and characterization are satisfactory, although it could have been much better. What really counts in this film is the stunning atmosphere of the fantastically filmed, slightly surreal sex scene between the two female protagonists. Everything else is mediocre at best, and the ending is total nonsense.

6/10

38. Fright Night (1985)

R | 106 min | Horror

62 Metascore

"Fright Night" sees a teenager believing that the newcomer in his neighborhood is a vampire. He turns to an actor in a television hosted horror movie show for help to deal with the undead.

Director: Tom Holland | Stars: Chris Sarandon, William Ragsdale, Amanda Bearse, Roddy McDowall

Votes: 78,668 | Gross: $24.92M

"I have just been fired because nobody wants to see vampire killers anymore, or vampires either. Apparently, all they want to see are demented madmen running around in ski masks, hacking up young virgins."

At the end of the eighties, I often went to visit my uncle. His son had a big poster for this movie on his bedroom wall. A poster that fascinated me and aroused my curiosity, and because of which I nothing would made me stay alone in that room. At that time, I didn't have a video recorder, and I don't think there were any video clubs, and even if there were, I doubt that my parents would have let me watch horror movies. Three and a half decades later, I finally watched it.

"Fright Night" is without any competition the film that has been sitting on my watch-list for the longest time, and probably decades of anticipation and childhood fascination raised my expectations unrealistically high, but I must say that I am quite disappointed. This movie is not bad, far from it, but it is even further from horror. To whom this is scary, "A Nightmare on Elm Street" would cause a stroke or a heart attack.

A typical representative of the light-horror films of the eighties, at a time when slashers were at their peak, "Fright Night" returns to the vampire mythos and combines it with teenage romance. Characteristic make-up and special effects of that era horrors, with a fair amount of humor and obligatory comic-relief characters (Peter Vincent - the vampire killer, a witty name that alludes to Peter Cushing and Vincent Price). The film is in all respects quite nicely done and entertaining for a relaxing afternoon, but also quite unimpressive and forgettable.

6,5/10

39. Vamp (1986)

R | 93 min | Comedy, Fantasy, Horror

Two fraternity pledges travel to a sleazy bar in search of a stripper for their college friends, unaware it is occupied by vampires.

Director: Richard Wenk | Stars: Chris Makepeace, Sandy Baron, Robert Rusler, Dedee Pfeiffer

Votes: 7,041 | Gross: $4.94M

"After Hours" meets "From Dusk Till Dawn"

To be accepted into a fraternity, two teenagers (Chris Makepeace and Robert Rusler) go in search of a stripper for a college party. Of course, things go wrong and turn into a teenage horror-comedy.

While watching the movie, scenes from Scorsese's "After Hours" (1985) and then from Rodriguez's "From Dusk Till Dawn" (1996) flashed through my head. Later I saw online that many people had the same associations. I wouldn't be surprised if this film was inspired by Scorsese's, as well as if the iconic Rodriguez was inspired by this, with Salma Hayek being, in my opinion, a convincing step up from Grace Jones.

Grace Jones got a relatively small, but important and very impressive role, which should combine sexual sensuality with mystery and fear. She presented the mystery and horror perfectly, but it is completely incomprehensible to me to associate Grace Jones with sexiness, although this lack is obviously subjective, since I didn't find people sharing my opinion. I would also like to mention the leader of the albino gang, who is played by Billy Drago and who is probably the only character that will remain in my memory. The rest of the cast and their performances don't stand out from the sea of mediocre teen comedies.

The same goes for all other aspects of the film. I have no complaints, but I have nothing to praise either. The movie is entertaining, holds the attention, but nothing particularly stands out. Ok for one viewing.

7/10



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