Lovely painted background as the stagecoach heads through the Transylvanian mountains.
Renfield ignores the villagers & we're soon with the totally normal and clean-living Count and his 3 "wives."
"I am Dracula! I bid you welcome! The children of the night; What music they make!" Famous lines, undiminished by uncountable retreads.
By the time, we're on the ship back to England, with Dracula hiding in his box of soil, Renfield's become a full-on loon.
When the ship arrives in England, the crew are all dead, the Captain tied to the wheel, seen only in shadow...
...and in the hold, Renfield is grinning to himself. A newspaper report describes his newfound prediliction for insects.
Dracula's having a night on the town & fancies a bite to eat. No takeaways open, so he chows down on a flower girl.
Next the Count goes to a gig, then hooks up with the Harkers and their pals.
Dracula gets his batsuit on to pay Mina a call. such effective use of light and shadows as he creeps ever closer to her neck.
Van Helsing threatens Renfield with Wolfsbane, a plant the Transylvanians use as protection from vampires...
Dracula returns to the scene of the crime, where Van Helsing outs him as a vampire by proving he has no reflection.
They quiz Renfield. "Dracula? I've never even heard the name before." he says, shaking and grinning dementedly. Well, I'm convinced.
With both Lucy & Mina having fallen victim to Dracula, Van Helsing & Harker resolve to track down the vampire and destroy him.
Mina's acting all crackers. Now she loves fog, hates Wolfsbane & she wants Jonathan to get Van Helsing's crucifix away from him.
They hunt Dracula to his abbey lair, where Van Helsing stakes him, and Mina is freed from his influence.
Hmmm. Bit of a damp squib ending if I'm honest, but easily forgiveable, such a seminal work and such a mesmerising atmosphere.
TTFN! K.
Coming Soon... The Curse of Fenric
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