1958 BBFC Cert. “X”

Dracula

Alternative Title: Horror of Dracula

After a difficult journey, Jonathan Harker arrives at the remote Castle Dracula in the Carpathian mountains, ostensibly to index the library belonging to the elegantly aristocratic Count Dracula. But Harker’s real purpose is to destroy the Count, who he knows is in reality a four hundred year-old vampire, an undead being steeped in evil which feasts on the blood of its living victims. Harker’s quest is doomed to failure and puts his fiancée, Lucy, in peril of her life as Dracula, besotted by her photograph, makes her his prey. Only one man, Professor Van Helsing, possesses sufficient knowledge of the ways of the vampire to offer any hope of salvation…..

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Production Details

A Hammer Film production
Released by Universal Pictures
Copyright MCMLVIII by Hammer Film Productions – All rights reserved
MPAA Approved Certificate
RCA Sound System
Produced at Bray Studios
Colour by Technicolor 81 mins

From the novel “Dracula” by Bram Stoker

Filming Began: 11th November 1957
UK Release: 16th June 1958 1957

Studio:
Bray Studios, Down Place, Oakley Green, Berkshire

Location:
Bray, Berkshire – Country roads

Stills from film

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Cast & Crew

Cast – Verified complete
Crew – Believed complete

Red = Uncredited

Original Poster
Dracula 1958

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Footnotes

Following hot on the heels of The Curse of Frankenstein, Dracula was similarly slated by the critics as being over-gory, sadistic and thoroughly repugnant – Hammer ought to be ashamed of themselves and mend their ways!
Fortunately for us, however, Hammer could not help but notice the continuous sound of cash registers taking large amounts of money from cinemagoers round the world. Quite simply, it was clear that they were giving the public what they wanted – and, for that matter, the distributors; Dracula apparently single-handedly saved Universal from financial disaster. Hammer’s reaction to their critics was, therefore, quite wisely to stick two fangs up to them and redouble their efforts to produce films of this style!

Actor Michael Gough also appeared in Hammer’s The Phantom of the Opera (1962). His work in the horror/fantasy field also includes films for American producers Herman Cohen, Max J. Rosenberg and Milton Subotsky. For Cohen, he made the notorious shocker Horrors of the Black Museum (1959), Konga (1961), Black Zoo (1962), Berserk! (1967) and Trog (1970); for Hammer rivals Rosenberg’s and Subotsky’s Amicus company, he had roles in Doctor Terror’s House of Horrors (1965), The Skull (1965) and They Came from beyond Space (1967). In the 1990s, he gained a whole new audience as Alfred the butler in the “Batman” series of blockbuster movies.

Miles Malleson was a character actor who excelled at playing delightfully dotty eccentrics. He can also be seen in Hammer’s The Hound of the Baskervilles (1958), The Brides of Dracula (1960) and The Phantom of the Opera (1962).

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