Scars of Dracula

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Scars of Dracula

"Scars of Dracula" cover
Directed by Roy Ward Baker
Produced by Aida Young
Written by Bram Stoker (character)
Anthony Hinds (screenplay)
Starring Christopher Lee
Patrick Troughton
Dennis Waterman
Jenny Hanley
Michael Gwynn
Michael Ripper
Distributed by Hammer Studios
Release date(s) November 8, 1970
Running time 96 min.
Country UK
Language English
Preceded by Taste the Blood of Dracula
Followed by Dracula AD 1972
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Scars of Dracula is a 1970 British horror film directed by Roy Ward Baker for Hammer Studios. It breaks continuity with Hammer's previous Dracula vehicle Taste the Blood of Dracula, and was apparently intended to start a new series.[citation needed]

It stars Christopher Lee as Count Dracula, alongside Dennis Waterman, Jenny Hanley, Patrick Troughton, and Michael Gwynn. Although disparaged by some critics, the film does restore a few elements of Bram Stoker's original character: The Count is introduced as an "icily charming host";[1] he has command over nature; and he is seen scaling the walls of his castle (albeit a little more like Spider-Man than a bat).

David Pirie, one of the first critics to take Hammer films seriously, criticized the film for tarnishing the Dracula myth by having him torture a servant with a red-hot sword and stab a woman to death.[2]

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

A prologue shows local villagers rising up and, led by the local innkeeper along with the priest, set fire to Castle Dracula. But when they return home, they find bats have swarmed inside the church where their women were waiting. Every single woman in the village is dead...

After being caught with the burgomasters' daughter, libertine Paul Carlson flees by jumping into a nearby coach. This deposits him near Count Dracula's mountaintop castle and there he becomes Dracula's latest victim. His more sober brother Simon Carlson and his fiancee Sarah Framsen come searching for him and end up fighting the Prince of Darkness.

Christopher Lee as Count Dracula meets his demise (again) in Scars of Dracula (1969).
Christopher Lee as Count Dracula meets his demise (again) in Scars of Dracula (1969).

  1. ^ David Pyrie, A Heritage of Horror (1973)
  2. ^ Pyrie, op cit


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