For about the first 15
minutes of its running time, the British-made horror spoof Old Dracula seems as if it might turn into something amusing. David
Niven plays a courtly, modern-day version of the famous bloodsucker. Instead of attacking victims in their homes, he allows tours through his castle, “pretends” to be Dracula,
drugs his guests, and discreetly drains their blood via IV tubes. Turns out he’s searching for the rare blood
type that can revive his undead girlfriend, Vampira. After establishing this passable premise, however, Old Dracula
devolves into crass buffoonery. When several Playboy models, one of whom is black, visit Dracula’s castle, the
count drains their blood and revives his lady—but thanks to a plasma mix-up, Vampira (Teresa Graves) becomes black. Thereafter, Dracula and his resuscitated
companion chase the models across Europe, hoping to find the blood that’s required
to “correct” Vampira’s transformation. Sadly, the movie’s cavalcade of insulting stupidity has merely begun. After seeing a blaxploitation movie, Vampira starts
talking like a clichéd ghetto click, and then Old Dracula gets bogged
down in dull melodrama straight out of a Hammer flick: Caddish swinger
Marc (Nicky Henson) tries to save his girlfriend (Veronica Carlson) from
Dracula’s clutches, even though Marc is (sort of) under Dracula’s hypnotic spell.
Alas, none of this is funny. It’s a bummer to see the
eternally charming Niven mired in this dreadful movie, which was originally
titled Vampira but renamed
to piggyback on the success of Mel Brooks’ 1974 smash Young Frankenstein. Niven is the only top-shelf actor in the picture, and the starlets
surrounding him (Graves included) are terrible; furthermore, the storyline drags from
one repetitive incident to the next, becoming tackier with each
passing scene. Ultimately, Old Dracula makes the mediocre 1979 Dracula spoof Love at First Bite seem sublime by comparison. (Available
as part of the MGM Limited Collection on Amazon.com)
Old Dracula: LAME
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