Wednesday, February 4, 2026

I SAW DRACULA 2025

Writer/director Luc (Leon: The Professional/The Fifth Element) Besson's Dracula: A Love Tale is the latest, cinematic take on Bram Stoker's perennial novel. It's a remake, therefore, but more so, a remake of a remake: a specialized turn, indeed, but this wouldn't be the first time such an uncanny revival was achieved. 

Victor Fleming's 1941 adaptation of Robert Louis Steven's Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is, in fact, a redux of Rouben Mamoulian's 1931 adaptation. The productions are reflections of each other, with precise, comparative components shared from one to the other, including the character of Ivy, played first by Mariam Hopkins and later by Ingrid Bergman. (For the record, Ivy is an evident retooling of Nita Naldi's Gina from John S. Robertson's 1920, silent classic.) 

For Besson's 2025 Dracula, which shifts its chief location from England to France, we're dealt an imprint of Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 Bram Stoker's Dracula. (Some have argued that Dario Argento's controversial, 2012 edition is as much a remake of Coppola's, though others maintain that it only reframes several key scenes from the earlier picture.) The parallel between the 1992 and 2025 retellings makes Mina Murray not just a fetching lass who catches the Count's eye, but rather his reincarnated love. (This idea was used in Karl Freund/John L. Balderston's The Mummy, which many consider an unofficial reimagining of Dracula.) 

Also, as in the Coppola retelling, the Turk-battling Dracula rejects Christianity when his love is struck dead. Dracula's mate, in this respect, is named Elisabeta in both the 1992 and 2025 versions, fitting the carryover tradition set by the Jekyll/Hyde set. (Please note: Elisabeta doesn't exist in Stoker's novel or in any other Dracula play, series or movie.)

Caleb Landry (The Last Exorcism) Jones is quite effective as the suave, parasitic lead, tapping the Gothic, Old World command of Bela Lugosi, John Carradine, Francis Lederer, Christopher Lee, Zandor Vorkov, Louis Jordan, Frank Langella, Michael Nouri, Duncan Regehr, Geordie Johnson, Gerard Butler, Thomas Kretschmann, Jonathan Rhys Meyers ... and Claes Bang, underscored by Gary Oldman's anxious, grief-ridden hostility and the fever-eyed avidity of Udo Kier, Howard Vernon, Klaus Kinski and Lon Chaney Sr.'s Man in the Beaver Hat, as captured in so many London After Midnight stills. 

Zoe Bleu plays the Elisabeta/Mina counterparts, with Matilda De Angelis as the enslaved Maria (i.e. Lucy Westenra) and Christoph Waltz (who struck a jolting chord in Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein) as the Priest, an Abraham Van Helsing surrogate (and implied exorcist), who imbues his character with an endurance that recalls Anthony Hopkins' 1992 incarnation, supplemented by a decent strand of Peter Cushing's from his Hammer chapters, Andrew Keir's Father Sandor from Terence Fisher's Dracula: Prince of Darkness, Herbert Lom's from Jess Franco's Count Dracula and Hugh Jackman's from Stephen Sommers' monster rally, Van Helsing.

Comprising the biding, supporting cast is Ewens Abid as Jonathan Harker, Guillaume de Tonquedec as Dr. Dumont (i.e. John/Jack Seward) and David Shields as Henry Spencer (i.e. a blending of Arthur Homewood and Quincy Morris). It should be noted that the alteration of names is an explored (if not copyright-deceiving) horror-movie practice used in F.W. Murnau's Nosferatu, as well as Stephen Weeks' I, Monster, an Amicus reimagining of Jekyll/Hyde, though the entirety of Dark Shadows did much the same without an ounce of shame. (Is Jonathan Frid's Barnabas Collins not Dracula in disguise?)  

Jones' indefatigable "Vlad of Wallachia" pursues Mina much like Oldman's version pursues his own (though in Jones' case, with a few Highlander-styled flashbacks along the way). These Draculas are prompted not by superficial lust, but to reinstate their plundered existences, all within stretches that grow insufferable without Elisabeta. Whether with the 1992 or 2025 entry, Dracula believes (if only per implication) that regaining his love will spur his redemption: that the power of love eradicates sin. Of course, this notion is naive, and with a committed vampire hunter on his tail, any second chance for the Count is marked by inevitable comeuppance. Dracula, after all, must pay for his deeds, which pushes the movie to its despairing conclusion. (Danny Elfman's mercurial/music-box-ish score billows through this emotional motif, referencing a popular, Dark Shadows passage, though Colin Wandersman's cinematography counters the idyllic sweeps with militaristic heft and unearthly foreboding.) 

Make no mistake, though Dracula: A Love Tale probes affairs of the heart (and is devoid of wolf and bat transformations, castle brides and alas, an insect-nibbling R.M. Renfield), it does get monstrous when need be, offering a dozen gargoyle servants in its Carpathian phases and down the morbid line, one snappy decapitation. Even so, the production's amorous aura devours most of its menace, placing it alongside other such tender takes as the obvious, Coppola edition, Javier Aguirre/Paul Naschy's Dracula's Great Love, Bram Stoker's Dracula 1974 (directed by Dark Shadows' Dan Curtis and starring Jack Palance), the Cliffhangers serial, The Curse of Dracula (with the aforementioned, pre-Flashdance Nouri), Dracula Untold (a passionate prequel with Luke Evans), Love at First Bite (a jaunty escapade with George Hamilton) and William Crain's Blacula (a modern, Dracula spinoff, starring William Marshall, which holds a lost-love, reincarnation angle of its own.) 

Stoker's novel was always considered romantic, if only in the way it could quicken a reader's pulse. Dracula: A Love Tale plucks that string, and for those who appreciate the warmth behind a vampire's clamminess, this one should fit like a custom-made glove. Take a bite. You might just find that this weird, love tale stakes the right, reiterated spot.  

WISE WORDS:

SNEAK PEAK DARK FICTION, THE GREATER GOO, PART 2

Raffaele Pezzella just dropped the second half of my Dark Fiction, David Lynch-inspired story, "The Greater Goo" for Eighth Tower Magazine through Patreon. (See February 1 post regarding Part 1.)

"The Greater Goo" references storylines and concepts found in Twin Peaks, Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive, Eraserhead and The Elephant Man. It features a strange entity (a "goo," if one will) inspired by both the Eraserhead baby and "the Arm" from Twin Peaks: The Return. The creature absorbs (rather like the Blob), collecting and cultivating flesh, but also the thoughts that swarm around it. (For the record, there is, in fact, a smidgeon of Todd Solondz's Welcome to the Dollhouse in the tale, due to the goo's friend, a downtrodden lass.)

One can access "The Greater Goo" at

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBkFbHKhKjkSslBQNBgjkFfsq

FOR THE FUN OF IT:

 

I SAW FALLOUT, SEASON 2: AN ALTERNATE FUTURE

 

I prefer Season 2 of Amazon Prime's Fallout over the first. Why's that? It's because after some reflection on the initial season, I suspected that its Cold War-derived warning held insinuations that don't jive with my socio-political mindset. But is my suspicion justified? Gosh, I can't say for certain, so why dare put Fallout (adapted for the screen, I must add, by Graham Warner and Geneva Robertson-Dworet) in the same estranging league as such controversial examples as The Boys, Gen V and Preacher, despite its implicating flashbacks and intermittent winks? 

No matter what's contained (i.e., hidden) in Season 1, Season 2 moved without any obvious, subversive incident or condescending rhetoric (or so it seemed). In a way, it's nearer the frivolous The Electric State, an alternate-reality submission that I do enjoy, even though several know-it-alls have told me that I shouldn't. Ah, what do know-it-alls know? Nothing, really. 

Getting back to my point, I do believe Season 2 is better, more seamless, than the founding run. For one, Kyle MacLachlan's Hank MacLean, former overseer of Vault 33, enters fully exposed. We now know that Hank's one sick son of a gun, and in Season 2's case, rather snarky, even if his related antics don't necessitate any chuckles. (He seems to get them, though, all the same.) 

For me, Season 2's top highlight, however, is Ella Purnell's Lucy MacLean, aka Sugarbomb, and Walton Goggins' Ghoul, aka Cooper Howard, former cowboy star, forever hounded by his past, as well as Justin Theroux's slicker-than-slick, mind-manipulating Robert House. Lucy and Ghoul came to comprise one of the best dynamic duos to go down the dystopic pike. (Their loyal Dogmeat stands as a steadfast companion for them, too, in the Trigger, Silver, Hero and Devil vein, and much the same can be said of Johnny Pemberton's along-for-the-ride Thaddeus, a ghoul with a heart of gold, who performs in humble contrast to Macaulay Culkin's steely-eyed Kaiser Lacerta Lagate, but even the ardent, "Roman" commander was cordial to dear Lucy, despite crucifying her.) 

Yep, I really enjoyed following these unlikely "pals," even if some segues could have (should have) been expanded. For example, the Elvis, ghoul gang needn't have been so come-and-go. Its members should have become a significant, ongoing presence and worked as a sprawling salute to Gary Panter's Invasion of the Elvis Zombies, but oh well ... (As a form of compensation, the scene where Lucy shoots Ghoul's rope during his hanging is a terrific tribute to The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, when Blondie lets Tuco dangle a spell and then ka-bang! I sure dug that allusion. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is, after all, my favorite western.)

I also appreciate Aaron Moton's Maximus' search-for-a-better-tomorrow quest, as it invokes a Logan's Run/Planet of the Apes/Mad Max vibe, with specks of Excalibur bridging the gaps, thanks to the cumbersome Brotherhood of Steel. As with Lucy and Ghoul, Maximus' journey could have progressed all on its own. (His valiant showdown with the dreaded Deathclaws more than suggests his dauntless stamina). Such could have designated him as a post-apocalyptic Iron Man, if one will, with a strong self-discovery component attached. (Now that I think of it, self-discovery is the rocket fuel behind most of Fallout's tricky tracks and something that would [and should] characterize any decent video game: the successful, electronic niche from which this live-action saga emanates.)

On the saga's domestic side, I found Annabel O' Hagen's Stephanie Harper (a Hank gal underneath) and Dave Register's Chet to be a most identifiable couple. Their relationship is strained, if not forced, but through it comes credibility. Their tension reflects what many couples (fledgling or seasoned) experience. Hey, even high fantasy needs some realism. (Stephanie's back story is quite anchored, defining her in a way that's honest, even if suspicious in its guarded progression, exuding a perceptible aloofness that not only agitates Chet, but Leslie Uggums' cynical Betty Pearson.) 

On all fronts, I gotta say that this quaint, parallel universe now plays as an unswerving and pleasing spread of the old and the new, but the enduring, antiquated context (with all those soothing, satirical songs) is the icing on the cake. The culmination feels real comfortable, even when it's not, which I guess is the franchise's aesthetic intent. 

Monday, February 2, 2026

I SAW GEORGE A. ROMERO'S RESIDENT EVIL

George A. Romero's Resident Evil is a 2023 documentary (placed in recent circulation), directed by Brian Salisbury, who cowrote with Robbie McGregor. It explores the Pittsburgh filmmaker's rejected vision for a theatrical adaptation of the video-game franchise, inspired in large part by his original, Dead trilogy.

Romero did, in fact, direct a commercial for the sequel game to Capcom's Resident Evil, known in Japan as Biohazard, which led his consideration for a film version of the Umbrella Corporation's heedless horrors, though we learn that Romero had reservations on taking the directorial reins for the feature, stating that, while making the commercial, he felt he was plagiarizing his own material. 

The documentary opens with a rundown of Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead, followed by a retrospective on Resident Evil/Biohazard's genesis and its obvious nods to Romero's trilogy. Such demonstrates that there wouldn't be a Resident Evil if not for Romero (and John Russo)'s zombie mythology.

Astute fans and contributors associated with both franchises share explicated details, including actor Norman England, actor Christian Stavrakis, actor Jim Krut (Dawn of the Dead's helicopter zombie), actor Pat Jenkiewcz (a Resident Evil, commercial zombie), reviewer James D. Rolfe, Romero archivist Ben Rubin, producer/editor Michael Felsher, director/Romero protege Dick Demick and Resident Evil designer Kenichi Iwao. Their reflections are linked by narrator Pablo Kuntz, who voiced the original, Resident Evil game. 

Problems with Romero's intended adaptation occurred when the owners of Resident's movie rights, Constantin Film (known for its involvement in Wolfgang Peterson's The NeverEnding Story and Das Boot, as well as Oley Sassone's "unreleased" The Fantastic Four) balked at the carnage contained in Romero's script (despite such existing in the games). As a result of desiring something more restrained, Romero's contract was terminated and Paul W. S. Anderson's loose but stylized version was greenlit, which proved violent in its own right, even if geared in the action-movie vein. 

A substantial sum of the documentary covers Romero's faithful-to-the-source script, but also Resident Evil's many intricacies. Depending on one's appreciation or hunger for Resident Evil, the latter may either delight or frustrate, considering that Romero wasn't a direct participant in such, beyond his works' outside influence. Nevertheless, for the sake of historical bridging, the approach is sensible, thorough and essential. 

The documentary ends with Romero's passing, handled with great pathos by its on-screen commentators. A few of Romero's other unfinished projects are referenced during the conclusion, but the Resident Evil hiccup remains his most profound, came-close-but-never-was. Who knows? Romero's adaptation may very well exist in an alternate reality, laden not only by his deft conceptualization, but with stand-out additives from Berni Wrightson, Tom Savini and Greg Nicotero. 

George A. Romero's Resident Evil dangles this prospect to the point that one can almost taste it, and because of this, Salisbury and McGregor's effort deserves high marks for its scrupulous and impassioned rumination. 

For the full film, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZejDDfFAIvc

&

https://tubitv.com/movies/100045845/george-a-romero-s-resident-evil?start=true&tracking=google-feed&utm_source=google-feed&startPos=0