Dracula (1931)
24KDracula: Directed by Tod Browning, Karl Freund. With Bela Lugosi, Helen Chandler, David Manners, Dwight Frye. After a naive real estate agent succumbs to the will of Count Dracula, the two head to London where the vampire sleeps in his coffin by day and searches for potential victims by night.
“u0026quot;I bid you welcome,u0026quot; u0026quot;I never drink wine,u0026quot; u0026quot;Children of the night…what music they make,u0026quot; and of course u0026quot;I am Draculau0026quot; are memorable lines that resonate throughout horror films, literature, art, etc… throughout the 20th century because of a landmark film made in 1931 starring Bela Lugosi and directed by Tom Browning. This film was the birth of the horror film as we know it. Its importance can not be underestimated. Dracula is a wonderful film for so many reasons, but first letu0026#39;s look at its many faults.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe film is by today standards very antiquated. It has almost no soundtrack, stage acting for the most part, limited special effects, and a slow pacing. It has long parts of little action and lots of chat. It shows little while leaving much to oneu0026#39;s imagination(a plus for those like myself that are good at envisioning what is not shown). With all this not going for it, why is Dracula such a classic? Why is it considered to be such a great film and a great horror film?u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe answer is that even with all these flaws (and bear in mind some of these flaws are not flaws for all) the film offers a rich story in an eerie, atmospheric way. Bela Lugosi was Dracula. He was the model for oh so many vampires to come. His gesturing, his deliberation in speech, his facial movements all created a vampire never to be forgotten. Despite Lugosi, however, is the real genius of the film….Tod Browning. Browning created a movie and a setting hitherto imagined and conjured on a screen. Browning was the man behind the camera that created the cob-webbed stairs of the Dracula castle and the squalid emptiness of the crypt. He created the ghoulish female vampires thirsting for blood. Dracula is not just a film to see, it is film history and should be viewed with that in mind and not put under a microscope of todayu0026#39;s languishing tastes.”