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Horror

Dracula: Prince of Darkness

- DEAD for Ten Years DRACULA, Prince of Darkness, LIVES AGAIN!

Whilst vacationing in the Carpathian Mountain, two couples stumble across the remains of Count Dracula's castle. The Count's trusted servant kills one of the men, suspending the body over the Count's ashes so that the blood drips from the corpse and saturates the blackened remains. The ritual is completed, the Count revived and his attentions focus on the dead man's wife who is to become his partner; devoted to an existence of depravity and evil.

Release Date : 1966-01-09

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Hammer Film ProductionsSeven Arts Productions

Production Country : United Kingdom

Alternative Titles : Disciple of DraculaDracula 3Revenge of DraculaThe Bloody Scream of DraculaDracula Prince of DarknessDracula 3: Prince of Darkness

Cast

Christopher Lee

Character Name : Count Dracula

Original Name : Christopher Lee

Gender : Male

Barbara Shelley

Character Name : Helen Kent

Original Name : Barbara Shelley

Gender : Female

Andrew Keir

Character Name : Father Sandor

Original Name : Andrew Keir

Gender : Male

Francis Matthews

Character Name : Charles Kent

Original Name : Francis Matthews

Gender : Male

Suzan Farmer

Character Name : Diana Kent

Original Name : Suzan Farmer

Gender : Female

Thorley Walters

Character Name : Ludwig

Original Name : Thorley Walters

Gender : Male

Philip Latham

Character Name : Klove

Original Name : Philip Latham

Gender : Male

Charles Tingwell

Character Name : Alan Kent

Original Name : Charles Tingwell

Gender : Male

Walter Brown

Character Name : Brother Mark

Original Name : Walter Brown

Gender : Male

George Woodbridge

Character Name : Landlord

Original Name : George Woodbridge

Gender : Male

Philip Ray

Character Name : Priest

Original Name : Philip Ray

Gender : Male

Joyce Hemson

Character Name : Mother (uncredited)

Original Name : Joyce Hemson

Gender : Male

John Maxim

Character Name : Coach Driver

Original Name : John Maxim

Gender : Male

Jack Lambert

Character Name : Brother Peter

Original Name : Jack Lambert

Gender : Male

Peter Cushing

Character Name : Doctor Van Helsing (archive footage)

Original Name : Peter Cushing

Gender : Male

Reviews

W

Wuchak

@Wuchak

2021-06-23

Lee returns as Dracula after an 8-year absence. RELEASED IN 1966 and directed by Terence Fisher, “Dracula: Prince of Darkness” focuses on two English couples circa 1900 traveling the mysterious forests of Eastern Europe who are warned to stay away from a particular area that has an ominous castle. Fools that they are, they end up spending the night and the sinister Count is resurrected. Hammer did nine Dracula films from 1958 to 1974: Horror of Dracula (1958); The Brides of Dracula (1960); Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966); Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968); Taste the Blood of Dracula (1969); Scars of Dracula (1970); Dracula AD 1972 (1972); The Satanic Rites of Dracula (1973); and The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires (1974). Christopher played the Count in every one of these except "The Brides of Dracula" and "The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires." As such, "Dracula: Prince of Darkness" was Lee's return to the role after a long eight year absence. Most Hammer fans praise the first film in the series from 1958, which was Lee's first gig as Dracula, and it is a solid entry with the typical Hammer highlights, like lush Gothic ambiance, bright colors, Lee & Cushing and bodacious women, not to mention Lee's diabolical interpretation of the Count and one of the most stunning horror scores by James Bernard. But the truncated story wasn't completely satisfactory and there were too many 50's limitations IMHO. I prefer this sequel as it features all the Hammer hallmarks listed above, except Cushing. Some might complain about the slow first half, but I like the way the film takes its time and concentrates on the two couples, the spooky ambiance, and the build-up of suspense. Klove (Philip Latham) is a particularly creepy character with his courteous pretense. The way he resurrects the Count is a ghastly highlight. Interestingly, Lee doesn't have all that much screen time and not one line of dialogue, so he's basically a vampire bogeyman here. But the lush Gothic atmosphere is potent and the cast shines, especially Barbara Shelley as the doomed wife of a so-“cultured”-he's-stupid husband (Charles Tingwell). And Andrew Keir as Dracula's worthy antagonist, Father Sandor, a most formidable monk. I also appreciated the elaboration on vampire lore by Sandor (Keir). One reviewer scoffed at the idea that the undead have to be willingly allowed into a person’s abode, but this fits the parallel of vampires to evil itself, which first affects a person’s mindset (ideology) and THEN their behavior or lifestyle. In short, evil cannot overtake a person unless s/he willingly allows it. THE FILM RUNS 90 minutes and was shot in Buckinghamshire and Berkshire, England, (with, perhaps, some establishing shots from Romania, e.g. the mountains). WRITERS: Jimmy Sangster and Anthony Hinds. ADDITIONAL CAST: Francis Matthews & Suzan Farmer play the other couple. GRADE: B