False Fitting: The Best Dracula and Vampire Mistakes in Cinema

False Fitting: The Best Dracula and Vampire Mistakes in Cinema

In Reinfeld, now in theaters, Nicolas Cage dons a Dracula cape and sharp dentures, joining a long line of movie vampires that began in 1922 with Friedrich Murnau’s seminal Nosferatu. It even goes as far as black-and-white stage-length with 1931’s unforgettable Dracula filming several scenes immortalized by Bela Lugosi.

Part-time vampire hunters and full-time false connection trackers, Michelle and Michelle take this opportunity to bring you a special program dedicated to the gaffes, mistakes and failures of the greatest vampire productions. A fun way to revisit this sub-genre of horror cinema, carried by a creature with long teeth that is ubiquitous on the big screen.

About this best program: NosferatuTherefore, rather Dracula The 1931 version, The Lost Generation with its punk ghouls led by a young Kiefer Sutherland, Dracula The 1992 version by Francis Ford Coppola, Interview with the Vampire and his sophisticated bloodthirsty trio Tom Cruise / Brad Pitt / Kirsten Dunst, The Blade He Carries. Daywalker Wesley Snipes, John Carpenter’s lesser-known but iconic vampires, the first chapter of the vampire novel Twilight between Bella and Edward, Van Helsing and his hunter Hugh Jackman, Gothic Underworld 2 and Marvel’s Morbius. Not to mention, of course, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Sarah Michelle Gellar.

Take out the wooden poles, cloves of garlic, crucifixes and yellow markers: AlloCiné’s technicians will take you on this journey to the land of long teeth. Camera crew, travel scissors, nothing escapes them. And it’s blood for blood, hard, very, very hard!

Source: Allocine

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