Dull and silly, Dracula’s Dog—sometimes known as Zoltan: Hound of Dracula—lives down to its ridiculous title.
Although the film has a fair amount of visual polish given its shoestring
budget, the script is so unrelentingly brainless that the movie elicits boredom
more than any other reaction. In the goofy opening scene, Russian soldiers
excavating a cave discover a crypt bearing the family name “Dracula,” and a
coffin spills from the crypt. For no discernible reason, a soldier opens the
coffin, discovers a figure with a stake through its heart, removes the stake,
and then watches as the figure reconstitutes into a Doberman with vampire
fangs. The dog kills the soldier, pulls another coffin from a crypt, and removes
the stake from the figure in that coffin, reconstituting
half-human/half-vampire henchman Veidt Smith (Reggie Nalder).. Instead of
reviving their old master, Veidt and the dog decamp to Los Angeles, where they
seek out Michael Drake (Michael Pataki), last survivor of the Dracula family
line. Does any of this make sense? No, and neither does the “plan” of stealing
Michael’s blood for some nefarious purpose. Much of the picture comprises drab
scenes of Veidt watching Michael enjoy a camping trip with his family, and then
telepathically commanding the dog to make mischief once the sun goes down each
night. Even with the occasional scene of the dog chomping onto the neck of a
human or another dog, this picture is numblingly boring, especially because the
rinky-dink musical score is such an assault on the ears. Compounding these
problems, it’s embarrassing to watch the great José Ferrer trudge through
idiotic subplot scenes while portraying a Van Helsing-type pursuer.
Dracula’s
Dog: LAME
4 comments:
I hear they're remaking it, with De Niro in the Jose Ferrer role.
If, having buried his credibility with "Dirty Grandpa," he now wishes to piss on his own professional grave. And we thought "The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle" was as low as De Niro would go. Sigh. I think I'll watch "Heat" again for a palette cleanser.
I didn't mind him as Fearless Leader, but I really can't excuse him for "Little Fockers."
If only the De Niro rumour was true. I'd be all in favour of it, provided Bob's only dialogue throughout the film is the immortal "Yes, Zoltan, yes."
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