When Bram Stoker first published his novel Dracula at the end of the 19th Century few could have predicted the impact his literary vision would generate especially the critics who were far from ...
It's been more than 125 years since Bram Stoker introduced us to Count Dracula, and in all that time we've seen the legendary vampire take on many forms. He's been to Sesame Street, on cereal boxes, ...
John Lutz is a Weekend Film/Television News Writer for Collider. He joined the team in the summer of 2021, but has been an avid fan and follower of the site for years. With a Bachelor's Degree in ...
Will has been writing about movies and entertainment for over six years. He has written articles for such publications as Off-Kilter Media and The Borgen Project, and he now works as a freelance ...
In 2024, we have no need to try and make vampires happen. They have already happened for at least a century, and they're very much still happening: stories about vampires have saturated just about ...
There is, as anyone who has attended a film festival or repertory cinema screening of a classic foreign film can attest, a kind of laughter that pervades such dark spaces. It is a knowing laughter: ...
The celebrated Romanian filmmaker Radu Jude produces a clutch of truly disturbing sights in his latest film, Dracula, where mangled bodies and blood-gorged ghouls leer at the audience from the screen.
Since the beginning of early cinema, Count Dracula has been featured in hundreds of movies. However, the first time audiences were introduced to Bram Stoker’s blood-sucking character was in F.W.
The premise sounds like a fever dream: Nicholas Cage playing Dracula in a horror comedy based on a pitch by Robert Kirkman--you know, the Walking Dead guy--directed by the man responsible for The Lego ...