Theme: Béla Lugosi's Dead - Bauhaus
Spoilers ho:
1979's Vlad Țepeș was as exciting a work of entertainment as it was a thoughtful and compelling historical drama, making 2014's accessible capeshit spin on the material just a little bit redundant, but if Hollywood revisionists are going to ruin every female villain with a le sympathetic origin story (Wicked, Maleficent, fucking Cruella, of all things), then it's only fair the lads get to reclaim pop culture's preeminent prince of darkness, setting the record straight on everyone's favourite vampire and neatly bridging the historical and fictional Draculas (Draculae?). Also, it's kind of a remake of the start of Coppola's Bram Stoker's Dracula, focusing in on the 15th Century setting and skipping over the events of the 1890s novel, which thereby neatly lets that be its own thing.
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| Least cinématic Tuesday of Vlad's life. |
Voiceover narration gives a brief summary of Vlad's past in the Ottoman janissary corps and his return to the throne of Wallachia, except they call it Transylvania, which is a different part of Romania, but, hey, if you court the capeshitter audience you have to take great pains not to confuse them. Things are going well for Vlad (Luke Evans) and his wife (Sarah Gadon) for about two minutes before the Ottomans are back demanding moar boys to be child soldiers (and rape slaves, but they left that part out). Vlad fights back to protect his kid, but knows he'll need more power to repel the giant pedo empire at his door, so makes a Faustian pact with Charles Dance's elder vampire, who grants him super strength and the ability to transform into a flock(?) of bats.
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| Apparently acceptable collective nouns for groups of bats include "colony", "swarm" (boring) and "cauldron" (much more patrician). |
The twist is that he can return to human if he makes it three days without drinking blood, so it's not like a dumb deal-with-the-devil because he can have his cake and eat it too, providing there's no tragic plot contrivance where he has to drink the blood and become Dracula Untold (2014) forever. Even when he does, he willingly kys's himself, except a second tragic plot contrivance brings him back, but you can't fault his intentions the whole time, making him by far the easiest Faustian sucker (lol) to root for in the movies. If you walk yourself back through the plot beats point by point, he made all the choices that seemed to make the most sense at the time, and that's all I ask.
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| True to life, /ourboi/ did NOTHING wrong. |
Yeah, yeah, I know, this is otherwise a dumb flick packed with dumb vampire movie clichés, like death by silver (literally everyone forgets that's werewolfs) and the hilarious, risible death by sunlight which makes being a vampire an extended game of the-floor-is-lava:
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| "Whoah! Almost fucking died again, ahaha, whoops!" - a very terrifying creature of the night. |
But no matter! It wins points for set and costume design, for its correct portrayal of Mehmet as an evil shithead, and for fighting revisionist fire with fire. The action may be of the CG-heavy capeshittoid variety, but it's still kind of fun, and the sequel-hook nonsense easily dismissed. No one anywhere on Earth remembers this, but in the 2010s someone at Universal Studios was obsessed with trying to jam the square peg of the Classic Monsters into the round asshole of the loathsome Cinematic Uuuuniveeerse trend popularised by Marvel.
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| Did someone say uuuuuuniveeeeeerse? I'm gonna...I'm gonna consoooooooooom!!! |
The idea was that Dracula Untold, the Tom Cruise Mummy and (I think?) the someone or other Wolfman would form the basis of a heckin universerino in which monsters would do boopin snootin Marvel Team Ups, so presumably the Charles Dance character was meant to be one of the "villains" they would face. Naturally the Dark Uuuniveeerse (yes, that is what they called it) never happened, so we'll never see the showdown between Drac and Dance. I know you're devastated to learn that, but let's just assume /ourlad/ wins quickly and goes on to retake Constantinople, in a sequel worthy of the great man.












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