Dracula (Christopher Lee) is once more resurrected and with this revival the formula for a Hammer Dracula film is truly carved in stone, despite Peter Cushing's Van Helsing not being present. Elements that had been previously deployed are distilled down to a concise essence, and Dracula uses his limited moments of dialogue to chilling effect.
The Count goes in for a midnight snack.At
the dawn of the 1900's, Monsignor Ernst (Rupert Davies) arrives in the
village that lies in the shadow of Castle Dracula, apparently to whip
the local clergy into shape for being lax in their duties. He drags the
fearful local head priest to the castle door, where he proceeds to
perform an exorcism of the premises, but in the process the reluctant
priest suffers a minor head wound that bleeds into the ice of the nearby
frozen river, a body of water in which Dracula perished at the end of
the previous movie. Once up and about again, the Count tracks down the
priest and drags him back to the castle where, to his considerable
indignation, he finds his entry barred by a large golden crucifix. After
pressing the terrified priest for info on the Monsignor, Dracula sets
off on a very personal campaign of vengeance. Meanwhile, the Monsignor
lives with his buxom blonde niece, Maria (Veronica Carlson), a serving
maid at the town inn, and the girl is in love with a student named Paul
(Barry Andrews). That's a problem because Paul is an atheist, a state of
which the Monsignor absolutely does not approve. With an irate vampire
about to enter the fray, it is Paul's lack of belief that renders him
pretty useless in the face of the coming onslaught, and that conflict
forms the true crux of the narrative. It's a case of the mundane being
faced with the darkest of the fantastical, and the way it plays out may
not be flawless, but it's certainly entertaining.
I won't outline
any more of the particulars, as it will be more fun for you to see it
all unfold for yourself, and the overall package works swimmingly as a
textbook example of an engaging vampire flick. The performances are
solid, the visuals are replete with atmosphere, and extra points for
Barbara Ewing as bawdy tavern wench Zena.
In short, and opinions definitely vary on this, next to the first in the run, this just may be the quintessential Hammer Dracula movie.
Poster for the original U.K. release.
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