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As with Young Frankenstein, Brooks closely mimics the look of the classic Dracula films, in particular the Bela Lugosi Dracula (1931) there is a perfect replica of the cobwebbed grand staircase in Draculas castle, as well the long sweeping staircase that Lugosi carries Helen Chandler up at the abbey. Peter MacNichol also closely bases his Renfield on the weird performance given by Dwight Frye in the Lugosi film. The story follows the original Bram Stoker novel surprisingly closely although one might also note that it changes Stoker in exactly the same places that the Lugosi Dracula does. In both films, for example, it is Renfield that takes over the Jonathan Harker role and travels to Transylvania, and in both films the subsequent action is also constricted to the Seward asylum. Sadly, Dead and Loving It fails to add up to a decent or even funny film. Brooks does lame gags on familiar cliches of the genre Dracula rises up out of his coffin and whangs his head on a low-slung chandelier; he has to tell his wives to stop mysteriously gliding and walk normally; when he hypnotizes Mina and orders her to come to him, she confuses the directions and walks into a cupboard; he carries her off, professing undying love only to find he has picked up the overweight maid by mistake; and, in a spoof of Bram Stokers Dracula (1992), Draculas shadow is independent and keeps tripping up or trying to roger other peoples shadows. None of this amounts to anything particularly funny. Most of Brookss humour is lowbrow and vulgar sex-oriented jokes, pratfalls and an obsession with bodily fluids. The sad truth, one realizes, is that Mel Brooks has failed to make a good film in the ensuing 20 years since Young Frankenstein. Mel Brooks casts Leslie Nielsen as Dracula. Through his popularity in the Airplane and Naked Gun films, Nielsen has turned himself into a sort of live-action cartoon figure and has appeared in numerous other movie parodies. Here however, Nielsen fails to carve a memorable Dracula he is merely playing another live-action cartoon figure that happens to wear a cape and have a funny accent. Everyone else affects a ridiculously fruity British accent and are not helped by Brookss habit of getting them to yell at the top of their voices while standing eyeball to eyeball.
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