Not to be confused with the
Leonard Nimoy-hosted TV series In Search
of . . . (which spotlighted Dracula in one episode), this flimsy European
documentary explores the real-life roots of vampire mythology while also
including dramatic scenes featuring Hammer Films icon Christopher Lee as both
the fictional character Dracula and the 15th-century historical figure Vlad
Tepes, whose bloody reign in Transylvania helped inspire Irish novelist Bram
Stoker to pen his enduring 1897 novel Dracula. Additionally, Lee narrates the piece in his usual stentorian style. In Search of Dracula is an odd hybrid. During many passages, it’s
like a bland educational film; scenes of
modern-day Transylvanians dancing around a town square are particularly unexciting.
Yet whenever Lee appears onscreen as Dracula, he preys upon nubile women who seem to spend most of their time
dressing and undressing. That said, while the makers of In Search of
Dracula succumbed to the lure of sensational gimmicks, they didn’t have the
nerve to present full-on Grand Guignol excess.
At the time of the picture’s
release, some of the information that director/coproducer/cowriter Calvin Floyd
presents was relatively fresh, such as the connection between Stoker’s creation
and Tepes (better known as “Vlad the Impaler”). The movie also does an adequate
job of tracing bloodsucker iconography from ancient Egypt to post-medieval
Hungary, where notorious murderess Elizabeth Báthory bathed in the blood of her
victims, and beyond. There’s even some cringe-inducing laboratory footage of a
real vampire bat in action, as well as interesting sequences
explaining how Stoker wrote about a region he’d never visited. Floyd shows
restraint in terms of describing Dracula’s prominence in films, although clips
from F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu (1922)
and other silent films unspool at excessive length, presumably because the
public-domain content was available for Floyd’s use free of charge.
By far the
weirdest sequence in the movie is an extended vignette about a modern-day
European named “Bill,” who is shown practicing vampirism on himself—he nicks
his throat with a razor and drinks the blood that flows from his wound. The
“Bill” images, however, feel as fabricated as the shots of Lee playing Tepes
while wearing a silly wig and a series of even sillier headdresses. Still, even
though subsequent documentaries and TV specials have undoubtedly improved on
the scholarship of this low-budget enterprise, the grungy ’70s vibe and Lee’s
participation lend In Search of Dracula
a measure of kitschy appeal.
In Search of Dracula: FUNKY
No comments:
Post a Comment