Dracula (1931)
Dracula (1931) is one of the earliest classic American horror
films from Carl Laemmle's Universal Pictures - an acclaimed masterpiece directed
by Tod Browning, known also for two other vampire films: London After Midnight
(1927) (aka The Hypnotist) with Lon Chaney, Sr., and his own sound-era remake,
Mark of the Vampire (1935) (aka Vampires of Prague), with Bela Lugosi and Lionel
Barrymore sharing Lon Chaney's dual role. On account of Universal's success with
this classic Dracula film, the next year, Browning went on to direct the truly
bizarre, classic horror film Freaks (1932) for MGM - a controversial and
grotesque film that has achieved cult status, and was banned for almost thirty
years in Britain.
With this "talkie" horror film, Hungarian stage actor Bela Lugosi (originally
named Bela Blasko), who had starred in the smash-hit Broadway stage play, took
over the part for the film when Lon Chaney, Sr. ("The Man of a Thousand Faces")
died of throat cancer. [Browning had teamed with Lon Chaney, Sr. on ten films,
including The Unholy Three (1925) - about a trio of sideshow freaks, London
After Midnight (1927), West of Zanzibar (1928), and Where East is East (1929).]
Lugosi established himself as the definitive screen vampire.
The plotline was taken from Abraham ("Bram") Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula. (The
screenplay by Garrett Fort was more closely adapted from the successful stage
play by Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston.) The first film version of the
novel was an early German silent film, Nosferatu: A Symphony in Terror (1922),
an unauthorized adaptation of Stoker's novel directed by expressionist F. W.
Murnau. In Murnau's film, the rodent-like Dracula (Max Schreck) was renamed
"Graf Orlock." [The film was released in England as Dracula.]
Since then, there have been about a dozen true film adaptations of the Stoker
novel (Francis Ford Coppola's Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992) is probably the most
faithful), and literally hundreds of other Dracula sequels, farces, and other
vampirish variations (including the "blaxploitation" Blacula films of the early
70s). Hammer Films generated The Horror of Dracula (1958) (with Christopher Lee
as "the Count") after purchasing film rights from Universal.
This successful, atmospheric 1931 adaptation, although somewhat flawed by its
slow dialogue and static, stage-bound nature, helped to launch a long series of
horror-pictures for the studio. (Universal's follow-up picture was the equally
successful gothic Frankenstein (1931).) Its eerie lighting, gliding camera
trackings, and moody and shadowy atmosphere were largely the work of
cinematographer Karl Freund. [An impressive-looking Spanish version, with
director George Melford in place of Browning, was shot simultaneously on the
same sets at night, but with a different cast and crew (Carlos Villarías
replaced Lugosi, and Eduardo Arozamena as Van Helsing, along with
provocatively-dressed actresses Lupita Tovar as Eva (Mina) and Carmen Guerrero
as Lucia (Lucy)).]
Although it's hard to believe today, segments of the film were censored in
overseas viewings: a gigantic bug's emergence from a coffin, the appearance of
Dracula's three zombie-like wives in his castle, Renfield's begging scene to
allow him to eat spiders and flies, and the reading of a newspaper account of
vampire bride Lucy's victimization of children.
The opening scenes of the film are the high-point of this screen classic. It
begins with the cinematic and atmospheric appearance of a horse-drawn carriage
making its winding way down a steep, narrow road through the jagged Carpathian
mountains in Central-Eastern Europe (the locale is NOT explicitly identified as
Transylvania). The coach is going at breakneck speed in order to reach the inn
before dark, jostling its passengers in its haste. A young English passenger on
board asks the driver to go slower, but he is ignored. Another passenger from
the local area explains excitedly that they must reach the local inn before
twilight ends:
We must reach the inn before sundown!...It is Walpurgis Night, the night of evil
Nosferatu! On this night, Madame, the doors, they are barred, and to the Virgin
we pray.
When the coach finally comes to a halt at an old inn, the darkness is impending
- it is nearly dusk and the sun is going down behind the black mountains. Most
of the relieved passengers climb down to end their journey for the day.
One passenger announces his plans to proceed further: "I say, porter. Don't take
my luggage down. I'm going on to Borgo Pass tonight." He is told by the nervous
inn proprietor (Michael Visaroff) that the coach driver is afraid to continue,
and that they should wait until sunrise. The undaunted young Englishman insists
on carrying out his plans to go on to Castle Dracula:
Englishman: Well I'm sorry but there's a carriage meeting me at Borgo Pass at
midnight.
Innkeeper: Borgo Pass?
Englishman: Yes.
Innkeeper: Whose carriage?
Englishman: Count Dracula's.
Innkeeper: Count Dracula's?
Englishman: Yes. (The inkeeper's wife superstitiously crosses herself.)
Innkeeper: (fearfully) Castle Dracula?
Englishman: Yes, that's where I'm going.
Innkeeper: To the castle?
Englishman: Yes.
Innkeeper: (tremulously) Nooo. You mustn't go there.
The passenger is cryptically warned by the innkeeper to abandon his trip until
the next day, because deadly vampires appear between sunset and sunrise:
We people of the mountains believe at the Castle there are vampires. Dracula and
his wives - they take the form of wolves and bats. They leave their coffins at
night and they feed on the blood of the living.
The traveler, an affable real estate agent named Renfield (Dwight Frye) isn't
superstitious or afraid of the warning: "But that's all superstition. Why I, I
can't understand why..." He is interrupted by an announcement that the sun is
setting, and the innkeeper insists: "Come, we must go indoors." The passenger
demands to go further: "It's a matter of business with me. I've got to go.
Really. Well, goodnight." As he climbs back into the coach, the innkeeper's
peasant wife rushes over and places a crucifix around his neck, advising: "Wait.
Please. If you must go, wear this for your mother's sake. It will protect you."
The journey to Borgo Pass commences, as the fearful townspeople watch the coach
depart.
As it gets darker, the coach presses on through the black, jagged mountains.
Dracula's Castle emerges into sight, and then the audience has its first eerie
dark glimpse of Dracula's coffin in his dark, rat-infested, cob-webbed cellar.
The coffin lid slowly creaks opens and a hand snakes its way out. A possum lurks
next to another coffin. The slamming sound of Dracula's coffin lid signals that
he has risen. One of his undead brides also slowly opens her coffin with her
hand. A gigantic bug, that looks like a wingless bee, crawls out of another
coffin. The undead bride emerges by sitting upright within her coffin. A possum
descends into a skeleton-filled coffin.
The first glimpse of Dracula, a 500 year old vampire, is shocking. He is
standing upright next to his coffin, wrapped tightly in an all-enveloping black
cape. His ashen face with a piercing, unmoving, cold fixed gaze is illuminated
with an unholy glow from the twilight and his black hair is slickly combed
straight back. Rats scurry about and wolves howl. Two of Dracula's three undead
brides glide silently along.
[A vampire is a reanimated corpse that feeds off the blood of the living,
turning victims into vampires.]
In the swirling fog around Borgo Pass, a coachman waits for the arrival of the
dutiful English businessman on his important journey. Near midnight, the coach
arrives. The terrified coach driver stops just long enough for his passenger to
climb down at the bleak crossroads. The driver hurriedly throws his luggage on
the ground and then abandons him. Sitting atop it, wrapped in a black cape, is a
tall, silent figure with one strange, hypnotic eye visible, but his face is not
clearly shown. The passenger nervously asks: "The coach from Count Dracula?" The
mute coachman gestures for him to get in. On the way to Dracula's castle over
jostling mountainous roads, he leans out the coach window to speak to the driver
- but the coach is driverless. The coachman (Dracula himself) has disappeared -
morphed into a large gray bat that flaps its wings above the horses and appears
to be guiding the carriage instead as it hurtles through the night.
The most memorable sequence in the entire film is Renfield's arrival at Castle
Dracula. Once the speeding coach arrives at the courtyard of the strange,
crumbling castle, he steps off the coach and begins to indignantly protest
against the driver:
I say driver, what do you mean by going at this -
However, he realizes there is only an empty seat - and no driver! The massive
wooden and iron castle door mysteriously creaks opens on its own. Unsure of
things, Renfield warily passes through the door and is amazed to find a huge,
deserted and ruined chamber inside. In the dark cavernous room, there are round
pillars framed by archways, massive windows, and a few sparse furnishings in the
dim light. Bats soar outside the windows and there are other scurrying sounds
inside, suggesting menace. The dwarfed figure of Renfield stands at the bottom
of the wide and long stone staircase of the castle. An ominous silence hangs
heavily in the air.
Dracula, elegantly dressed in a black tuxedo, slowly descends the massive
staircase while holding a single candle. Rats and armadillos scurry across the
dirt-covered stone floor. A giant spider web hangs from the ceiling above the
staircase. When Renfield turns, he is startled to find Dracula walking through
the large spider web without disturbing it.
Dracula glides toward him and memorably introduces himself in an immaculately
delivered line (uttered with a Hungarian accent):
I am...Drac-u-la...I bid you welcome.
Dracula plays the part of a refined, congenial host, a strange aristocratic
nobleman in tailored evening dress. He motions for his guest to climb the
castle's great stone staircase behind him, just as the sound of wolves can be
heard off in the distance. To reassure the frightened man, Dracula smiles and
chillingly describes the sounds, in a voice with a lilting, soothing tone:
Listen to them. Children of the night. What mu-u-u-sic they make.
When he follows Dracula up through the unbroken spider web that spans the width
of the staircase, he must use his cane to cut his way through. As the web's
spider scurries off, Dracula ominously comments about the spider's prey:
The spider spinning his web for the unwary fly. The blood is the life, Mr.
Renfield.
Renfield is invited into his "more inviting" medieval-looking guest room
upstairs, where Dracula is outwardly charming. There is a fire burning, a meal
spread out on the table, and a dusty old bottle of wine. Dracula takes
Renfield's coat and hat and leaves through a door that opens on its own. When
the host returns, Renfield assures the Count that he has kept his journey a
secret - no one in England knows he has come: "I followed your instructions
im-plicitly." Renfield has been hired to arrange for Dracula's relocation to a
neighborhood in England where he will lease a ruined and deserted English abbey
named Carfax Abbey. Only the papers need to be signed to finalize the deal:
"Everything is in order awaiting your signature." "I hope I've brought enough
labels for your luggage," asks Renfield, anxious to please his client. Dracula
describes his 'luggage' (of coffins): "I'm taking with me only three, uh,
boxes."
Dracula has chartered a ship to take them to England, "leaving tomorrow eve - n
- ing." As Renfield handles the lease papers, he cuts his finger on a paper
clip. [This is the sole depiction of blood on the screen in this film.] The
sinister host reacts eagerly to the sight of blood and reflexively moves closer
with a ravenous, blood-maddened look. Before the Count can get closer, the
crucifix falls from Renfield's neck into view and dangles over his hand, sending
Dracula reeling backwards - he throws his arm over his eyes. As Renfield sucks
the blood from his finger, commenting: "It's just a scratch," Dracula looks
hungrily at him with an approving grin. The vampire offers "very old wine" from
a bottle and pours it into a glass for his guest. Renfield asks: "Aren't you
drinking?" Dracula replies with another well-remembered, mellifluous line that
he never partakes:
I never drink...wi-i-i-ne.
Dracula leaves his guest for the evening with: "Good night, Mr. Ren - field."
Soon, Renfield feels light-headed and dizzy. Dracula's three undead wives
silently appear from the fog and glide together into the room. To get fresh air,
Renfield stumbles to the terrace window and opens the door to the balcony, where
he notices a large bat flying above him. Renfield staggers and then collapses on
the floor, drugged by the wine into a deathly slumber. The zombie-like spectral
wives wolfishly move toward the body. The Count, skilled at metamorphosis,
emerges where the bat had disappeared and enters from the balcony. With a silent
sweeping gesture, he commands his wives to move off and they back up into the
shadows. Dracula approaches and then crouches down at Renfield's neck for a meal
of blood, enveloping him in his cloak.
A few days later, the sailing ship Vesta is bound for England. It travels with
Dracula and his coffins (containing native earth) in a stormy sea voyage. Deep
in the hold of the ship at dusk, Renfield (now robbed of his own identity)
crouches and then protectively opens his master's coffin to release him. He
whispers and hisses: "Master, the sun is gone." Hideously and lustfully,
Renfield madly begs his steely-eyed master:
You will keep your promise when we get to London, won't you Master? You will see
that I get lives, not human lives but small ones, with blood in them? I'll be
loyal to you Master. I'll be loyal.
When the ship finally drifts into an English harbor at Whitby, it is a ghost
ship filled with corpses. Imaginatively staged, the voices of men investigating
the ship are heard. They rove around the deck (the camera follows their
wanderings) and find the entire crew on the derelict vessel dead: "The Captain
dead, tied to the wheel. Horrible tragedy, a horrible tragedy." Only an
enslaved, lunatic appears to have survived - they hear crazed laughter from the
hold.
Renfield emerges in the hatchway from the hold of the death ship. He stares up
at them, giggling and totally insane - obviously infected with Dracula's
madness. With a clever lighting effect of shadows, Renfield appears multi-legged
(like an insect) as he grasps the railing of the ship's hold. But he appears to
have lost his immortal soul with a wild look in his eyes: "Why he's mad! Look at
his eyes. Why the man's gone crazy!" The London newspaper reports the tragedy in
headlines: "CREW OF CORPSES FOUND ON DERELICT VESSEL, Schooner Vesta Drifts into
Whitby Harbor After Storm, Bearing Gruesome Cargo." The story reports on
Renfield's madness:
Sole survivor a raving maniac. His craving to devour ants, flies, and other
small living things to obtain their blood, puzzles scientists. At present he is
under observation in Doctor Seward's Sanitarium near London.
In Victorian London, his new place of residence, Dracula pursues human blood to
satisfy his hunger. Well-dressed in an opera cape and top hat, he strides
through the foggy London streets at night and cunningly preys on women. On his
way to a performance of the London Symphony, his first victim in the
fog-shrouded streets is a flower girl who offers: "A flower for your buttonhole,
sir? Here's a nice one." With one look at his hypnotic stare, she is placed in a
trance while he slowly bends down toward her neck. Police whistles sound as he
walks away from his first murder victim.
One night, during a performance of the London Symphony at the Opera House, an
elegantly-dressed Dracula hypnotizes a female usher/hostess and commands her to
interrupt Dr. Seward (Herbert Bunston) in his box, telling him that he is wanted
on the telephone. Pretending to have overheard the name of Seward as he is
called away to the phone, Dracula stages the opportunity to introduce himself as
Count Dracula - the new neighbor in the leased Carfax Abbey conveniently located
next to Seward's sanitarium. Dr. Seward introduces his daughter Mina Seward
(Helen Chandler), her friend Lucy Weston (Frances Dade), and Mina's fiancee John
Harker (David Manners). The abbey is known for being dark and gloomy, needing
extensive renovation and repair, but Dracula is comfortable in its familiar
surroundings: "I shall do very little repair. It reminds me of the broken
battlements of my own castle, Transylvania."
Lucy is hypnotically fascinated by the Count. The abbey reminds her of an old
toast:
Lofty timbers, the walls around are bare, echoing to our laughter as though the
dead were there...Quaff a cup to the dead already, hooray for the next to die!
She listens to him ominously intone about the deepest mysteries of life and
death. Dracula pauses dramatically as the theatre lights dim into darkness for
the performance and the floodlights come up and accentuate his glowing figure -
the cinematography moodily underscores the power of darkness and his
tragi-romantic assertion:
To die, to be really dead - that must be glorious...There are far worse things -
awaiting man - than death.
Mina is amused that Lucy finds the charming Count Dracula "fascinating," with
his talk of a Transylvanian castle. Lucy spends the night with the Sewards.
Later that night, after Lucy has opened her bedroom windows and retired, a large
bat flies in the window. In a classic scene, only moments later the Count
appears at her sleeping side, leaning over her. He bends down to bite her neck
to suck her blood, making her his prey. The scene cuts away and immediately
dissolves into the Sanitarium's amphitheatre during a medical examination of
Lucy - who has been brought there after many unsuccessful blood transfusions.
Dr. Seward diagnoses that he and his colleagues are unable to save her because
of "an unnatural loss of blood that we've been powerless to change. On the
throat of each victim, the same two marks." [The marks are kept discreetly out
of view from the camera.]
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