Dracula: Dead And Loving It Movie Review
Dracula: Dead And Loving It Review
"Dracula: Dead And Loving It" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Mel BrooksProducer : Mel Brooks
Screenwiter : Mel Brooks,Rudy DeLuca,Steve Haberman
Starring : Leslie Nielsen,Peter MacNicol,Steven Weber,Amy Yasbeck,Lysette Anthony,Harvey Korman,Mel Brooks
After the vastly disappointing Robin Hood: Men in Tights, Mel Brooks really
needed to prove himself by getting back to his Young Frankenstein and Blazing
Saddles-type comedy. The Dracula legend seemed like the perfect way to do it,
especially considering how perfectly Brooks skewered ol' Frank. But sadly,
Brooks manages to hack it up like he did to poor Robin Hood, thanks to some
very stale jokes and overly repetitious gags.
Brooks basically takes Bram Stoker's Dracula (Francis Ford Coppola's film) and
gives it the once-over, recreating the plot and characters almost directly from
that movie, and giving them supposedly funny lines. The problem is that Bram
Stoker's Dracula was pretty silly to begin with, and Brooks' version comes off
as poking fun at a film that was already doing a good job of it all by itself.
There are thankfully a few good lines in the film (my favorite: Van Helsing:
"She's Nosferatu!" Renfield: "She's Italian?"), but overall, the movie
sinks. Casting Leslie Nielsen as Dracula was a good move, as his antics are
always good for a chuckle or two, but the continual overexposure of people like
Amy Yasbeck (as Mina) in films like this leaves nothing new for the viewer to
expect. And while Lysette Anthony's sultry Lucy is fun to watch... they kill
her after 45 minutes.
Most of the movie's gags involve tripping, falling down, running into a wall or
a window, or some other slapstick device. But the most tedious of the jokes is
the nearly constant mocking of accents and overdramatic speech the various
characters use. This gets old after the second scene, where the stereotypical
trill in a gypsy's voice is made by the manual quivering of the skin around her
throat. Ha ha.
Brooks fans won't be pleased, and neither will the vampire aficionado. Stay
away from this film, and let it bury itself. Figuratively speaking, that is.
A massive commentary track featuring Brooks, Weber, Yasbeck, and others is the
sole extra on the new DVD release.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



