6.1
Three elderly distinguished gentlemen are searching for some excitement in their boring borgoueis lives and gets in contact with one of count Dracula's servants. In a nightly ceremony they restore the count back to life. The three men killed Dracula's servant and as a revenge, the count makes sure that the gentlemen are killed one by one by their own sons.
Christopher Lee
Dracula
Geoffrey Keen
William Hargood
Gwen Watford
Martha Hargood
Linda Hayden
Alice Hargood
Peter Sallis
Samuel Paxton
Anthony Higgins
Paul Paxton
Isla Blair
Lucy Paxton
John Carson
Jonathon Secker
Martin Jarvis
Jeremy Secker
Ralph Bates
Lord Courtley
Roy Kinnear
Weller
Michael Ripper
Inspector Cobb
Russell Hunter
Felix
Shirley Jaffe
Betty, Hargood's Maid
Keith Marsh
Father
Peter May
Son
Reginald Barratt
Vicar
Madeline Smith
Dolly
Lai Ling
Chinese Girl
Malaika Martin
Snake Girl
Amber Blare
Bordello Girl
Vicky Gillespie
Bordello Girl
Josie Grant
Bordello Girl
Juba Kennerley
Cafe Royal Patron
John Tatum
Cafe Royal Patron
Jim Brady
Mission Hall Diner
Dido Plumb
Mission Hall Diner
Jimmy Charters
Mission Hall Vagrant
June Palmer
Redhead Prostitute
Director
Peter Sasdy
Characters
Bram Stoker
Writer
Anthony Hinds
November 18, 2017
6
They have destroyed my servant. They will be destroyed...
Taste the Blood of Dracula is directed by Peter Sasdy and written by Anthony Hinds (AKA: John Elder). Out of Hammer Film it stars Christopher Lee, Geoffrey Keen, Peter Sallis, Linda Hayden, Gwen Watford and Ralph Bates. Music is by James Bernard and cinematography by Arthur Grant.
Trawling through all the sequels of Hammer's Frankenstein and Dracula series it becomes apparent that opinions differ greatly, a case in point is this, the fifth of the Dracula cycle. For her we have a Dracula film thought of very highly in some quarters, most notably in one of the Hammer Films' lauded literary bibles, myself, like the other 50% of Hammer film fans, just don't see that at all.
Famously it's the Drac film where Christopher Lee had to be greatly coerced into reprising the role of the blood sucking count, financial rewards doth talk it seems. His apprehension with script and stale feelings were well grounded, with the final result begging the question as to how bad was the script before Lee's intervention?
Story has three upstanding English gentlemen showing themselves to be model pillars of society by day, good stern parents/husbands and all that, but by night they are purveyors of a different sordid lifestyle, kind of like members of the naughty Hellfire Club! When decadent dandy Lord Courtley (Bates) offers then something tantalisingly more dangerous, they indulge and it results in murder and the rebirth of Count Dracula.
After a neat opening which tags onto the ending of Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, we find Dracula once again on a daft revenge mission, being a bit part once again in a film bearing his name, and saddled with minimal lines that really aren't worth a suck of the neck. Some striking sequences apart (Dracula birth - bloody retributions etc) the film feels like a confused blend of ideas. On one hand it's taking a caustic peak behind the curtain of upper crust Victorian England, on the other it tries to be a period based revenger fronted by the iconic beast of the title.
Under Sasdy's direction the look has been stripped back from the Gothic colourful splendour of previous Dracula entries, in place is a more earthy approach, which isn't as appealing. Of course there's a so-so romance simmering away, plenty of heaving bosom and blood shot eyes, and Bernard's musical score hangs around like a moody step-father. Which leaves us with a Hammer Dracula that's not bad at all, it's just ordinary and not all it can be, where they shoehorned Dracula into what is in truth a serial killer like revenge picture. 6/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00