Search

Title:

Director:

Year:

All Titles

A-B C-D E-F G-H
I-K L-M N-O P-R
S-T U-Z    

Science-Fiction

A-DE-KL-QR-Z

Horror

A-DE-KL-QR-Z

Fantasy

A-DE-KL-QR-Z

Main Menu


Review


COUNTESS DRACULA
Rating


UK. 1970.
Director – Peter Sasdy, Screenplay – Jeremy Paul, Story – Peter Sasdy & Alexander Paal, Idea – Gabriel Ronay, Producer – Paal, Photography – Ken Talbot, Music – Harry Robinson, Special Effects – Bert Luxford, Makeup – Tom Smith, Art Direction – Philip Harrison. Production Company – Hammer.
Cast:
Ingrid Pitt (Countess Elizabeth Nadasdy), Nigel Green (Captain Dobi), Sandor Eles (Imre Toth), Maurice Denham (Master Fabio), Patience Collier (Julia), Lesley Anne Down (Ilona)



Plot: The aging Countess Nadasdy strikes an incompetent maid, causing the maid to cut herself with a knife. The maid’s blood spatters the countess’s cheek and when she wipes it away she discovers that the skin beneath is youthful and fresh again. Killing the girl and bathing in her blood, the countess is able to regain her youth. She then sets about pursuing the handsome Imre Toth. She has her daughter Ilona kidnapped and imprisoned so that she can pose as her and marry Imre. However keeping her youth is a process that needs a constant infusion of fresh blood.



Countess Dracula is a Hammer film. Despite the title, it has nothing to do with Dracula, nor is it a part of Hammer’s popular Dracula series starring Christopher Lee that began with Dracula/The Horror of Dracula (1958). In fact, Countess Dracula technically doesn’t even have anything to do with vampirism. The name is only a billboard cash-in on the success of the Hammer Dracula series. What the story is based on is the real-life legend of Countess Elizabeth Bathory, a 16th Century Hungarian noblewoman who bathed in the blood of virgins to preserve her youth and whose legend is frequently cited as the historical basis for vampirism. There is no record of whether Countess Bathory was successful in regaining her youth or not, but this doesn’t seem to particularly concern Hammer.

Countess Dracula film features what, at the time, seemed to be two rising new talents in the second Hammer wave – director Peter Sasdy who had gained some favourable attention with the previous year’s Taste the Blood of Dracula (1970) and Ingrid Pitt who had played Carmilla in the previous year’s The Vampire Lovers (1970). But such an interesting historical subject as Countess Bathory makes for a disappointing film. While fair attention is paid to background detail, the film is perfunctorily plotted and directed. Peter Sadsy indulges to somewhat of an excess the sex and blood that came to supplant the florid stylism of directors like Terence Fisher and Freddie Francis toward the latter end of the Anglo-horror cycle. Ingrid Pitt was never a particularly good actress and the old age makeup she wears sits like pastry. Nigel Green lends customarily reliable support as the Countess’s man-at-arms.

Other films dealing with Countess Bathory are:– Daughters of Darkness (1971), where she turns up in a present-day Belgian hotel played by Delphine Seyrig; in an episode of Walerian Borowczyk’s erotic anthology Immoral Tales (1974), played by Paloma Picasso; in the Canadian erotic film Eternal (2004); incarnated in a videogame in Stay Alive (2006); in the present-day in the terrible Hungarian-made Metamorphosis (2007); in the animated Hellboy Animated: Blood and Iron (2007); as well as a continuing character in Paul Naschy’s Waldemar Daninsky werewolf series.

Peter Sasdy’s other genre outings were:– Taste the Blood of Dracula (1970), Hands of the Ripper (1971) about Jack the Ripper’s daughter, the ecological horror film Doomwatch (1972), the immortality syndicate film Nothing But the Night (1972), the Nigel Kneale ghost story tv play The Stone Tape (1972), the Satanic impregnation film The Devil Within Her/I Don’t Want to Be Born/The Monster (1975) and the proto-Virtual Reality film Welcome to Blood City (1977).

Last updated: Tuesday, 01 December 2009



 
< Prev   Next >