As Halloween approaches, Count Dracula will inevitably resurface as one of the most iconic and enduring monsters in popular culture. Since Bram Stoker published his original novel in 1897, countless ...
Victorians may not have suspected the nightmare they were reading was so obsessively researched, and for decades after Stoker ...
William Fischer is an author at Collider. Born and raised in Nebraska, he latched onto moviemaking at a young age and has been chasing it ever since. William holds a BFA in film from the University of ...
Obsessed with the 1897 Gothic horror novel and its Hollywood permutations since childhood, the filmmaker now admits the ...
Sam is a News Editor for Collider and a known lover of all things sci-fi and horror. She spends her days editing news stories, coodrinating exclusives, and working closely with writers to deliver ...
When Bram Stoker first published his novel Dracula at the end of the 19th Century few could have predicted the impact his literary vision would generate especially the critics who were far from ...
In 1890, Bram Stoker began research on what would become his most famous book, “Dracula.” During this research, which spanned years, the Irish author kept extensive journals in which he scribbled down ...
Bela Lugosi’s onscreen debut as Count Dracula (image still from Dracula, 1931) 2012 is the 100th anniversary of Bram Stoker’s death. Although we now know him best as the author of Dracula, Stoker was ...
Francis Ford Coppola’s take on Dracula is probably moviedom's most faithful adaptation of Bram Stoker’s original novel in terms of its story, its visuals and its tone. While this makes it admirable in ...