Film Review: “Dracula”

A style-over-substance vampiric jaunt through the ages

Dracula (Caleb Landry Jones) strolls through revelers in ‘Dracula.’

From Tod Browning to Francis Ford Coppola, Werner Herzog and Robert Eggers to Mel Brooks, and many in between, filmmakers love to put their stamp on Bram Stoker’s Dracula and/or its German offspring, Nosferatu. It seems that just about every year the Dracula story gets reimagined. Step up to the plate, writer/director Luc Besson (Léon, The Fifth Element, Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets). Besson imprints the traditional Dracula story with his trademark strangeness, choosing to emphasize both humor and gothic romanticism while filling the frame with strong production design. Though this new Dracula is far from dull, and even features a few standout performances, the film’s erratic style and tonality keep the final product from reaching the emotional and cinematic heights of its most memorable predecessors. Continue reading “Film Review: “Dracula””

Film Review: “The Last Voyage of the Demeter”

The Demeter sinks slowly but surely

There are two pieces of classic literature to which I’m happily devoted in the case of any film adaptation, re-imagining, modern take, or spin-off: Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol and Bram Stoker’s Dracula. I’ll save any further reading into my personal attachment to these two stories for therapy, because right now the latter intellectual property has a new entry in a long lineage of film adaptations, The Last Voyage of the Demeter. Based on a short but haunting chapter from the original Dracula text, The Last Voyage of the Demeter continues director André Øvredal’s impressive filmmaking streak, but too many imbalanced components can’t keep this Demeter afloat. 

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