Tag: dracula

  • ‘Sherlock’ Creators Making ‘Dracula’ Miniseries for BBC/Netflix

    ‘Sherlock’ Creators Making ‘Dracula’ Miniseries for BBC/Netflix

    Sherlock
    BBC/PBS

    Who should play Dracula? Is it elementary?

    Sherlock” creators and “Doctor Who” writers Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat are working on a “Dracula” miniseries with three 90-minute installments. The Bram Stoker adaptation will air on the BBC in the U.K. and Netflix elsewhere around the world.

    Here’s a tease from Netflix (via Variety):

    “In Transylvania in 1897, the blood drinking Count is drawing his plans against Victorian London. And be warned: the dead travel fast.”

    Moffat and Gatiss (who also plays Mycroft Holmes in “Sherlock”) shared their own tease:

    “There have always been stories about great evil. What’s special about Dracula is that Bram Stoker gave evil its own hero.”

    Here’s more from Charlotte Moore, BBC director of content:

    “Genius duo Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss turn their attentions to Dracula for unmissable event television on BBC One.”

    And now Larry Tanz, VP of content acquisition at Netflix:

    “We can’t wait to bring Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss’ brilliant storytelling to our members around the world and we are eager to collaborate on yet another series with the BBC.”

    Maybe it’s too obvious with the “Sherlock” connection and “Doctor Strange” cape, but screw it — Benedict Cumberbatch should play Count Dracula. If you disagree, come up with your own suggestions.

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  • The 21 Best Vampire Movies, Ranked From ‘Dracula’ to ‘Blade’

    The 21 Best Vampire Movies, Ranked From ‘Dracula’ to ‘Blade’

  • 9 Things You Never Knew About ‘Bram Stoker’s Dracula’

    We take it for granted now, but it must have seemed positively ludicrous at the time for Francis Ford Coppola — a man who had made a name for himself with “The Godfather,” “Apocalypse Now,” and moody thrillers like “The Conversation” — to tackle something like “Bram Stoker’s Dracula.”

    A faithful and old fashioned retelling of the classic novel, it was Coppola at his most wildly unhinged and experimental, but also at his most populist and entertaining. It’s a brilliant, frequently breathtaking film that borders on masterpiece status, and on its 25th anniversary, worthy of appreciation and discussion.

    Here are nine things you might not know about the blood-soaked favorite.

    1. It Was Winona Ryder’s Idea
    The script, by James V. Hart (who would go on to write “Contact” and, um, “Muppet Treasure Island“) was brought to the attention of Coppola by Winona Ryder, who met with the director to clear the air after her eleventh hour abandonment of “The Godfather, Part III.” (That debacle, which forced a production delay and led a bewildered Coppola to substitute his awkward and unprepared daughter for the Ryder role, is a “Things You Didn’t Know” unto itself.)

    Coppola was pondering an adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road,” when Ryder nudged him towards this material. Thankfully, Coppola bit.

    2. Coppola Wanted It to Be Super Sexy
    The filmmaker told The New York Times, shortly before the movie’s official release, that he wanted the film to resemble “an erotic dream.” Given the movie’s gauzy visuals, he definitely succeeded.

    3. It Was Something of a Redemptive Moment for Coppola
    It’s hard to remember what a crucial time “Dracula” was for Coppola; he was following a string of critical and commercial duds that ranged from the epic misfire “One from the Heart,” to more modest failures like the severely under-appreciated “Tucker: The Man and His Dream.”

    His company, American Zoetrope, once a hotbed for young creative talent wanting to push the limits of the status quo, was blinking on the edge of bankruptcy. “The Godfather, Part III” had made money, but paled in comparison to the earlier installments. “Dracula” was a chance to make a movie for a big studio on time and on budget, and that’s what he did.

    Coppola was “particularly concerned to prove that he could be a good citizen in terms of his responsibility report card,” said Mark Canton, chairman of Columbia Pictures, at the time. Ways of mitigating the possibility for cost overruns was shooting on soundstages at Sony Studios (where adjacent productions were confused about the literal rivers of blood flowing through the lot) and giving Canton weekly progress reports assuring him that all was well.

    4. Keanu Was Hired Because Hollywood
    If you’ve ever wondered why poor Keanu Reeves, so pretty and so young, can be seen struggling through a British accent in “Dracula,” well, it’s because they needed a big star and pretty much everybody else was busy. Coppola admitted trying to get a “matinee idol” for the role because “it isn’t such a great part.” Clearly, everybody else was busy.

    5. The Costumes Were Literally Everything
    More money was spent on the wonderfully offbeat costumes in “Dracula” (by designer Eiko Ishioka) than on the actual sets. (The costumes had their own lavish coffee table book called “Coppola and Eiko on Bram Stoker’s Dracula.”)

    Some of them were inspired by artists like Gustav Klimt, with Coppola insisting that the costumes were the “jewels” of the production. And, like jewels, they needed to be properly displayed, draped over handsome young actors. When a new deluxe edition Blu-ray for the film was issued, one of the documentaries was entitled, “The Costumes Are the Sets.”

    6. Visual Effects Were Purposefully Achieved the Old Fashioned Way
    While Coppola might have been a more responsible filmmaker on “Dracula,” that doesn’t necessarily mean he was done with his quirks. Coppola fired noted production designer Dante Ferretti six weeks before production began and hired a young “nobody” (in the words of Entertainment Weekly).

    He also insisted on that almost all the visual effects for the film be achieved using antique methods. (Coppola’s son, Roman — who would go on to become an influential director in his own right — worked on many of the effects.) A big talking point when the film was released was that the effects could have been accomplished by the production of the 1931 Bela LugosiDracula.”

    7. Coppola Made an Animated Version of the Movie Beforehand
    To give his collaborators an idea for what he was going for, Coppola assembled an animated version of the film comprised of illustrated storyboard, pieces of inspiration (like moments from the French version of “Beauty and the Beast“), and other designs.

    Edited together, Coppola felt he could give an aesthetic and tactile glimpse into what he was going for with his throwback-y feature. (Some of this could be seen in various home video releases for the film, beginning with a loaded Criterion Collection laserdisc.)

    8. Nobody Thought the Movie Was Going to Be a Hit
    Bad press besieged “Bram Stoker’s Dracula,” like many of Coppola’s films. Much had been made about Ryder and Gary Oldman‘s shared animosity, while other reports had test audiences throwing up from the movie’s graphic content (untrue).

    Further rumors had the movie being reshot just weeks before it was scheduled for release, although the castle that reporters saw rising into the sky on the Sony Studios lot was for an Arnold Schwarzenegger film that ended up never happening (Paul Verhoeven‘s incredible-sounding “Crusade”). In fact, there was even an insider-y nickname for the film: “Bonfire of the Vampires,” named after “Bonfire of the Vanities,” Brian De Palma‘s famously unpopular adaptation of Tom Wolfe’s novel.

    Instead, “Dracula” ended up being a huge hit, opening at #1 and ending up as the fifteenth most profitable film of that year, grossing more than $82 million in America.

    9. There Was a Bunch of Awesome Merchandise
    “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” was released during a time when kick-ass merch could still be produced for R-rated movies. Among the very awesome tie-in materials was a comic book written by the legendary Roy Thomas (a brilliant editor and Stan Lee’s successor at Marvel) and illustrated by future “Hellboy” creator Mike Mignola.

    Fans could also get their hands on a fairly challenging (but poorly received) videogame — released for Nintendo, Super Nintendo, Game Boy, Master System, Genesis, Sega CD, and Game Gear. There was also a pinball game, lifelike replicas of the movie’s iconic weaponry, and, of course, the truly unforgettable coffin-shaped collectible VHS release (above).

  • 15 Things You Never Knew About ‘The Monster Squad’

    Universal may have stumbled this summer with Tom Cruise‘s “The Mummy,” the studio’s first entry in what is to be a franchise that will unite its classic movie monsters. But a low-budget kiddie horror comedy got there first, three decades ago, and did it with enough wit and charm to endear itself to a generation of fans. That’d be “The Monster Squad,” released 30 years ago this week, on August 14, 1987.

    The movie pitted Dracula, the Mummy, the Wolfman, and the Creature from the Black Lagoon against Frankenstein’s monster and a group of brave misfit kids. It wasn’t a box office hit, but it developed a cult following on video that considered “Monster Squad” as essential an ’80s coming-of-age adventure as “The Goonies” or “Stand By Me.” Plus, it launched the career of one of Hollywood’s most successful screenwriters, Shane Black (the “Lethal Weapon” series, “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang,” “Iron Man 3“).

    If you’ve ever found yourself chuckling at the line, “Wolfman’s got nards,” you’re a member of the “Squad” squad. And yet, you still may not know how the film came together, which current A-lister nearly got to play Dracula, or why all the monsters don’t look exactly like they did in the old Universal movies. Read on for the secrets of “Monster Squad” — no translation by a Scary German Guy necessary.
    1. Shane Black and director Fred Dekker were film school classmates at UCLA. (Insert “Black & Dekker” joke here.) They collaborated on the “Monster Squad” script while Black’s “Lethal Weapon” was in development and Dekker was preparing to direct “Night of the Creeps.”

    2. When their film was greenlit, Dekker gave it a small shout-out in “Creeps,” in a shot where graffiti on a bathroom wall reads, “Go Monster Squad!”
    3. A little-known actor named Liam Neeson auditioned for the role of Dracula but lost it to Duncan Regehr, then best known for playing Hollywood icon Errol Flynn in the TV biopic “My Wicked, Wicked Ways.” Dekker said later that he had planned to use Neeson as Dracula’s double in one scene, but the scene was never filmed.

    4. The production hired no less than the late Stan Winston to create the look of the monsters, the monster-movie makeup legend who — at the time — just won an Oscar for “Aliens.” Winston had also just designed the title creature in “Predator,” a movie where Black had a bit part.
    5. Because Universal wouldn’t license its classic monster likenesses to the rival TriStar studio, Winston had to make the monsters look a little different (for instance, putting the Frankenstein monster’s electrodes on his temple instead of his neck), enough to avoid copyright infringement while still making them recognizable.
    6. Tom Noonan, whose career of terrifying performances includes the villains in “Manhunter” and “Last Action Hero,” applied his usual Method intensity to the role of Frankenstein’s monster. In fact, he never let the kid actors see him without his monster make-up. Ashley Bank, who played five-year-old Phoebe, joked that she never met Noonan until she was 25.

    7. Regehr was always in makeup around the kids — mostly. For the scene where Dracula lifts Phoebe, Dekker told Bank she would have to scream, and that she’d know the right moment. When the cameras rolled, Bank saw Regehr wearing red contacts and fangs for the first time and let out a shriek of real terror.
    8. Bank could have been in a landmark hit film that year, as she was up for the part of the daughter in “Fatal Attraction.” But that would have meant shooting in New York, instead of at home in Los Angeles. Besides, “Monster Squad” offered her a bigger role, and it was going to be a movie she was not too young to watch. “I never regretted it at all,” she said of her decision.

    9. Black’s initial opening scene would have been a prologue where Van Helsing (Jack Gwillim) strafes Dracula’s castle with a zeppelin armed with machine guns, facing off against 40 vampire brides on horseback. Dekker quickly nixed the budget-busting idea.
    10. Also not in the film: a scene where Sean (Andre Gower) and Patrick (Robby Kiger) trade baseball cards with a schoolmate, played by Dustin “Screech” Diamond. Dekker said the scene didn’t work, so the future “Saved by the Bell” star’s big moment got cut.

    11. If you originally saw the movie in theaters or (more likely) on VHS, there’s a lot you may not have noticed. Like how Sean and Phoebe’s mom has her suitcases packed, like she’s about to leave their father. Or that her note about the Van Helsing diary refers to it as the “Van Helen diary.” Or how Scary German Guy (Leonardo Cimino) has a number tattooed on his arm, indicating that he’s a concentration camp survivor. Or that the naked snapshot of Patrick’s sister Lisa (Lisa Fuller) that Rudy (Ryan Lambert) flashes at her to blackmail her isn’t actually a naked picture at all; if you freeze-frame the DVD, you’ll see that Fuller’s fully clothed. (It’s a PG-13 movie, folks.)
    12. There are a couple of goofs involving the trio of vampire brides. In one shot, their reflections are visible in a mirror. Also, Rudy kills two of them, but what becomes of the third? Dekker’s explanation: Don’t think about it too much, it’s just a movie.

    13. “Monster Squad” cost an estimated $12 million to make. It earned back just $3.8 million in theaters.
    14. In the early 2010s, a “Monster Squad” remake was in development at Platinum Dunes, the Michael Bay production company that’s specialized in remakes of ’70s and ’80s horror classics. By 2014, Platinum Dunes had declared the project dead.

    15. In 2016, however, Black said it “could be fun” to write a sequel, along the lines of Stephen King‘s “It,” where the now-grown squad members have to confront evil again 30 years later. No word on whether he’ll ever actually write that script, but he did reunite with Dekker to write a new “Predator” sequel, due in early 2018.

  • Dark Universe Adds ‘Dracula’ and More Monsters to Reboot List

    Dracula (1931)Start those casting debates about who should be the next Dracula. Universal is (finally) adding the famed bloodsucker to its roster of classic monster movie reboots.

    The Count will join new Dark Universe versions of The Mummy, The Invisible Man, The Wolfman, and Frankenstein.

    Also joining the ghoulish stable, according to “The Mummy” director Alex Kurtzman, remakes of other classic Universal horror films “Creature from the Black Lagoon,” “Phantom of the Opera” and “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” Fandom reports.

    First up, is “The Mummy,” starring Sofia Boutella, Tom Cruise, and Russell Crowe, which opens Friday. Then we’ll get Javier Bardem as the Monster in “Bride of Frankenstein.” Fittingly, Bill Condon, who made 1998’s “Gods and Monsters” about “Bride of Frankenstein’s director James Whale, will direct. Also announced: Johnny Depp as “The Invisible Man.”

    We might also be seeing more minor characters getting their own spin-offs. “There are characters within those films that can grow and expand and maybe even spin off. I think that digging into deep mythologies about monsters around the world is fair game for us, as well and connecting the monsters that we know to some surprising monsters could also be really interesting,” Kurtzman said while out promoting “The Mummy.”

    Does that mean we can expect, “Igor, the Movie?” (A role recently played by Daniel Radcliffe in “Victor Frankenstein.”) Or “Renfield: The Blood is the Life”? (Paging Tom Waits to reprise his role as the eccentric fly-eater from 1992’s “Bram Stroker’s Dracula.”)

    [Via Slashfilm]

  • 16 Vampire Movies That Don’t Suck

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    Yeesh, there are more lousy horror movies about vampires than there are skin flicks on Cinemax.

    But, luckily, vampire movies are as enduring as the legend of Dracula himself: Just when you think the genre is played out, great filmmakers manage to pump fresh blood back into the myth.

    Just for you, we’ve chosen some of the best vampire films — from classic screen Counts to ’80s Goth chic and bloody ’90s action — with nary a sparkling vamp in sight.

  • ‘Dracula Untold’ Star Luke Evans on Where the Universal Monsters Are Headed (EXCLUSIVE)

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    Earlier this week, “Dracula Untold,” the 2014 epic from Universal and Legendary that starred Luke Evans as the war-torn leader forced into making a very literal deal with the devil (and turning into the famous bloodsucker we know so well), was released on home video platforms, including digital download. To make the occasion, Universal flew a bunch of journalists out to Romania to walk around ancient castles from the era of the real-life historical figure, Vlad the Impaler. I, however, was not one of those journalists. (When your invitation is delivered via bat, it’s easy to see how it would get lost in transit.) So instead we got on the phone and spoke to the very charming Evans.

    During the conversation, we talked about whether or not any previous big screen incarnations of Dracula inspired his performance, what the special features on the Blu-ray will offer fans of the film, where his character is going in the newly constructed Universal Monsters universe and whether or not he’s still starring in “The Crow.”

    Moviefone: Did you take anything either from the original novel or from any of the other Dracula performances?

    Luke Evans: Some of my favorite films are Dracula movies. “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” is up at the top. But because of where we start this story and the fact that it’s an origin story, which had really never been put to film before, I didn’t use anybody else’s Dracula performance or story to influence it because it felt like we were doing something completely new. You’re also not dealing with the vampire at the beginning of the film, you’re dealing with a human. He’s the ruler of a very small kingdom in eastern Europe and a man who is fighting for the lives of his people and his kingdom. We all felt a very real sense of freedom to depart from the Dracula films that had been made and also the Bram Stoker story because this was several hundred years before he was even born.

    Was that a guiding principle throughout the production? To do something that hadn’t been done before?

    Yeah definitely. I think there are enough vampire/Dracula movies out there. Vampires are a huge fascination and audiences love them but what we were trying to do was tell a different story. I think a lot of people who went and saw the film were shocked and excited by the fact that it wasn’t just a straightforward Dracula movie. It was a powerful love story between this man and his wife and how he fights for it and it had a powerful, emotional core to it. I thought that was interesting and people were quite surprised by it.

    The movie went through some pretty radical changes and now with this Blu-ray you’re able to give people a sense of what it was. Are you excited for people to see that stuff?

    Absolutely. There was a lot of work in every film and stuff gets cut and everybody feels a little sad to lose the work because you think about those hundreds of people who were on set that day or for that scene and so much time, effort, money, and creativity and building of sets and costumes and make-up and special effects… These are things that have to go into every single scene and when they’re cut, you’re like, “Oh my god.” That’s what’s great about DVDs like this one — we’ve really gone into depth with deleted scenes but we’ve also given people back story so they can see how we made those huge battle sequences. We had cameras on set all day long filming B-roll and doing little interviews here and there explaining what was going on and that’s why we did it. I think they’re really interesting. I love watching the behind-the-scenes stuff and bonus features. Peter Jackson is a huge supporter of it. We had people filming us for a year and a half and it’s cool because sometimes you watch the movie and if you like the movie you want to see how it was made. It’s going to be fun.

    Would you like to see an entirely different cut with the stuff reinserted or are you pretty happy with how it turned out?

    I’m pretty happy. I think the story works well as it is. I would be intrigued to see how those scenes would work and interact with the other scenes if they were put back in. But maybe that’s just me being inquisitive.

    Do you know anything about where your character is going? We see you in present day at the end of the movie and we’ve heard about the Universal Monsters universe. Do you know what your next outing will be?

    I sort of do, very loosely. But obviously it is so under wraps that to talk about it would not be good for me or good for anybody, really. It’s exciting and the wheels are in motion and it’s cool to think about Dracula coming back in a different film and whoever he comes back with… The plans are huge and the ideas are massive.

    Is Dracula your favorite Universal Monster?

    Oh, without a doubt. He’s the oldest and the best. He came to our screens in 1932. And he’s still around 100 years later. He’s a cool dude.

    Are you still going to be The Crow?

    I’m not sure. Scheduling and date-wise it’s becoming a little complicated. It’s been pushed back quite a few times. Right now, I have other things ready to go and that’s what I’m going to be doing. If “The Crow” finally gets going and all the stars align, maybe I will. But right now: no.'Dracula' Madrid Photocall