Search

Dracula

1931, Movie, NR, 84 mins

starstarstarstar
The atmospheric opening is the best part — moody and full of sinister potential. After that, it's stilted drawing-room talk, variably acted except for the cultish over-the-top dementia of Dwight Frye as the madman Renfield. Still, it's the film that started the 1930s horror cycle, secured Universal's position as the horror studio and made Hungarian actor Bela Lugosi a worldwide curiosity. Read the complete review for Dracula
Year: 1931
Rated NR

User Rating: (16 ratings)
Add Your Rating: 1 stars2 stars3 stars4 stars5 stars

Cast
Bela Lugosi: Count Dracula
Helen Chandler: Mina Seward
David Manners: Jonathan Harker
Dwight Frye: Renfield
Edward Van Sloan: Dr. Van Helsing
Herbert Bunston: Dr. Seward

 

more Dracula cast & details

click to play
A look into the legend of Dracula. This clip is courtesy of THE HISTORY CHANNEL.
Free | Biography

Posted: 10/29/2008
click to play
The legendary bloodsucker stakes his claim on a British estate in search of new blood in...
Free | TCM

Posted: 8/1/2008
This History video relates the story of Dracula as told by Bram Stoker in his book. Some of...
Free | History
Length: 05:30
Posted: 11/24/2008
Full Episode
click to play
Dracula arrives to Los Angeles to drain Hollywood of blood. Van Helsing is looking for...
Paid | Amazon Video on Demand
Length: 33:00
Posted: 11/27/2009
Full Episode
click to play
more Dracula videos (5 total videos)
Loading...

November 10, 2006: The V Word

Masters of Horror creator and writer Mick Garris said that The V Word wouldn't be a romantic depiction of vampires, and that's definitely true. However, these vampires are not the breed found in cynical, doom-and-gloom existential metaphors like The Addiction or Habit, which is what I was anticipating. Instead, Garris himself wrote a pretty straightforward "teens explore crypts, get bit, get undead, get hungry, get gone" type of story. Michael Ironside, the ugly, angry vampire, was about as entertaining as Jack Nicholson in The Witches of Eastwick; too bad we didn't see more of him. I don't know why he carried a parasol in the graveyard, but what I don't know probably won't hurt me.Even though The V Word wasn't misted, shadowed and full of velvet and candelabras, Garris paid his respect to the romantic vampire by writing in some noticeable nods:— Ironside's character, "Mr. Chaney" (pretty obvious), is a nod to Lon Chaney, who was first considered for the role of Dracula (1931)... read more

I recently saw Rumble Fish, ...

Question: I recently saw Rumble Fish, and I know this is a petty detail, but can you tell me what movie is playing on the TV when Patty and Rusty James are making out? At first I thought it was Dracula, but it doesn't look quite right and I couldn't find the title in the credits.


Answer: It's Murder by Television (1935) starring Bela Lugosi, which is no doubt why Dracula (1931) occurred to you.

read more

Advertisement
Bram Stoker's Dracula [Blu-ray]
Buy Bram Stoker's Dracula [Blu-ray] from Amazon.com
From Columbia Pictures (Blu-ray)
Average Customer Review: nostarnostarnostarnostarstar
Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy New: $9.99 (as of 11/27/09 7:45 PM EST - more info)
Dracula (Norton Critical Editions)
Buy Dracula (Norton Critical Editions) from Amazon.com
From W. W. Norton & Company (Paperback)
Average Customer Review: nostarnostarnostarnostarstar
Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy New: $11.69 (as of 11/27/09 7:45 PM EST - more info)

more Dracula products

Advertisement