Count Dracula

Finally! The original version!

5.8
19701h 38m

A faithful adaptation of the classic tale portrays Dracula as an old man who grows younger whenever he dines on the blood of young maidens.

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: COUNT DRACULA (1970) TRAILER

COUNT DRACULA (1970) TRAILER

Cast

Photo of Klaus Kinski

Klaus Kinski

Renfield

Photo of Herbert Lom

Herbert Lom

Van Helsing

Photo of Maria Rohm

Maria Rohm

Mina Harker

Photo of Soledad Miranda

Soledad Miranda

Lucy Westenra

Photo of Fred Williams

Fred Williams

Jonathan Harker

Photo of Paul Müller

Paul Müller

Dr. John Seward

Photo of Jack Taylor

Jack Taylor

Quincey Morris

Photo of Jesús Puente

Jesús Puente

Minister of Interior

Photo of Emma Cohen

Emma Cohen

Vampire Woman (uncredited)

Photo of Teresa Gimpera

Teresa Gimpera

Crying Mother (uncredited)

Photo of Colette Giacobine

Colette Giacobine

Greta (uncredited)

Photo of Jesús Franco

Jesús Franco

Van Helsing's servant (uncredited)

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

4/10

_**Not as good as the Hammer Dracula films**_

Jonathan Harker (Fred Williams) travels to Transylvania to meet his client, Count Dracula (Christopher Lee), at his ominous castle. The horrific situation switches to London after Dracula acquires property there. The cast also includes Herbert Lom (Van Helsing), Klaus Kinski (Renfield), Maria Rohm (Mina) and Soledad Miranda (Lucy).

“Count Dracula” (1970) is yet another retelling of Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel, this time with quickie Euro-filmmaker Jesús Franco at the helm. It starts as an interesting new take on the done-to-death story, but it lacks the lush colors of the Hammer series and the film starts to drag with dubious direction & camera work with too many zooms. A curious scene where taxidermied animals threaten the protagonists doesn’t help. Then there’s the sequence in the final act where Van Helsing & Harker push Styrofoam boulders over a castle wall to murder Drac’s helpers. Meanwhile Kinski is wasted in one-dimensional role.

Yet the cast is great, as well as the authentic Euro locations with real-life castles and such. Plus the score by Bruno Nicolai is effective.

Lee played Dracula ten times all-together. Seven times in the Hammer series, as follows: “Horror of Dracula” (1958); “Dracula: Prince of Darkness” (1966); “Dracula Has Risen from the Grave” (1968); “Taste the Blood of Dracula” (1969); “Scars of Dracula” (1970); “Dracula AD 1972” (1972) and “The Satanic Rites of Dracula” (1973). This movie is the only other time he seriously played the role while he also appeared as the Count in two comedies: uncredited in “One More Time” (1970) and in the title role of “Dracula and Son” (1976).

The film runs 1 hour, 38 minutes and was shot in Spain, Italy and Germany.

GRADE: C/C-

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