A community portal about Bram Stoker's Dracula with blogs, videos, and photos. According to Wikipedia.org: Bram Stoker's Dracula is a 1992 horror/romance film produced and directed by Francis Ford Coppola, based on the novel Dracula by...
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A community portal about Bram Stoker's Dracula with blogs, videos, and photos. According to Wikipedia.org: Bram Stoker's Dracula is a 1992 horror/romance film produced and directed by Francis Ford Coppola, based on the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker. It starred Gary Oldman, Keanu Reeves, Anthony Hopkins and Winona Ryder. The score was composed by Wojciech Kilar and featured Annie Lennox. It was the 9th highest grossing film worldwide in 1992, making $215,862,692. It was the 15th highest grossing film in the U.S making $82,522,790.
Bram Stoker's own blood runs through the veins of a sequel to his 1897 novel Dracula, written by a great-grandnephew hoping to revive the original vampire myth and recently released in Australia. Start Raising Funds for Anything You Might Need
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Bram Stoker's own blood runs through the veins of a sequel to his 1897 novel "Dracula," which goes on worldwide release this month, in a work penned by his great-grandnephew who is hoping to revive the original vampire myth. "Dracula: The Un-Dead", which runs to almost 500 pages, is the fruit of an unlikely six-year collaboration between Canadian Dacre Stoker and Ian Holt, a New York screenwriter enamoured of vampires. "When people think of Dracula they think of handsome Bela Lugosi," said Holt, 39, wearing a T-shirt featuring the 1920s Hungarian actor who played him in the first Broadway production of Stoker's book, as ...
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"Dracula: The Un-Dead" (Dutton, 424 pages, $26.95) by Dacre Stoker and Ian Holt: Long before Edward Cullen of the "Twilight" series and Bill Compton of HBO's "True Blood," there was the original vampire, Bram Stoker's Prince Dracula, in the gothic horror novel "Dracula." Now, more than 100 years later, Dacre Stoker, the great-grandnephew of the famed Irish novelist, and Ian Holt, have written a sequel, "Dracula: The Un-Dead." The sequel begins in 1912, 24 years later, and it revisits original characters Mina and Jonathan Harker, Dr. Jack Seward, Arthur Holmwood and famed vampire hunter Dr. Abraham Van Helsing. The Harkers' marriage has been strained ...
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Bram Stoker's own blood runs through the veins of a sequel to his 1897 novel "Dracula", releasing worldwide this month penned by a great-grandnephew hoping to revive the original vampire myth. "Dracula: The Un-Dead", a thick almost 500-page epic being translated into 17 languages, is the fruit of an unlikely six-year collaboration between Dacre Stoker, a 51-year-old Canadian onetime coach and teacher, and a New York screenwriter enamoured of vampires, 39-year-old Ian Holt. "When people think of Dracula they think of handsome Bela Lugosi," said Holt, a gothic type wearing a T-shirt featuring the 1920s Hungarian actor heart-throb who starred in the first Broadway ...
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At last–the supplement to Bram Stoker’s artist new Dracula, cursive by his candid relation and a character student Bram Stoker’s character is the prototypical horror novel, an rousing for the world’s ostensibly immeasurable trance with vampires. Though some hit proven to flex Stoker’s horror classic- in books, broadcasting shows, and movies-only the 1931 Bela histrion flick eager the Stoker family’s support. Until now. character The Un-Dead is a bone-chilling supplement supported on Bram Stoker’s possess handwritten notes for characters and strategy clothing excised from the example edition. character The Un-Dead begins in 1912, twenty-five eld after character “crumbled into dust.” Van Helsing’s protege, Dr. ...
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Welcome to Gore Girls! MTV contributor Terri Schwartz doesn't know crap about the horror genre, and she's volunteered to be our Movies Blog guinea pig. She has a good guide too. Fellow contributor Jenni Miller is a bonafide horror enthusiast, and she's willing to walk Terri through her formative experiences with blood, guts, monsters and [...]
With the Gothic horror element still firmly intact, Stoker takes the classic legend further into darkness and despair. With the addition of new antagonists and a resurfacing of Bram Stoker's characters coping with the psychological downfall of repression and relentless terror, Dracula: The Undead takes readers through a mesmerizing labyrinth, approximately two decades later.
Free is the best way to see some movies. Take the Coppola-directed Bram Stoker's Dracula. The film was a disappointment on many levels -- it is miscast, skewed quite far from the book (contrary to the title) and oddly stagebound. And yet it has a few bright shining ideas and performances, and some killer production design. Thanks to Hulu you can now watch the entire film for free.
This version of Dracula was released in 1992 after no small...
Lust after supple white necks with Dracula on the big screen at Falcon Tavern.
by Tara Morgan
We all know the pointy toothed, black-caped, supple-white-neck-lusting Dracula made famous by Bram Stoker's 1897 novel. Many of us also know Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 dark masterpiece starring Gary Oldman as Count Dracula, Keanu Reeves as Jonathan Harker, Winona Ryder as the Count's love...
Long before Angel from the Buffyverse, or Edward Cullen of the "Twilight" series and Bill Compton of HBO's "True Blood," there was the original vampire, Bram Stoker's Prince Dracula, in the gothic horror novel "Dracula."