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Dracula contre Frankenstein

Titre original : Dracula vs. Frankenstein
  • 1971
  • GP
  • 1h 31min
NOTE IMDb
3,5/10
2,3 k
MA NOTE
Dracula contre Frankenstein (1971)
Dracula conspires with a mad doctor to resurrect the Frankenstein Monster.
Lire trailer2:26
1 Video
89 photos
HorrorSci-Fi

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueCount Dracula teams up with a mad doctor to revive the Frankenstein Monster.Count Dracula teams up with a mad doctor to revive the Frankenstein Monster.Count Dracula teams up with a mad doctor to revive the Frankenstein Monster.

  • Réalisation
    • Al Adamson
    • Samuel M. Sherman
  • Scénario
    • William Pugsley
    • Samuel M. Sherman
  • Casting principal
    • J. Carrol Naish
    • Lon Chaney Jr.
    • Zandor Vorkov
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    3,5/10
    2,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Al Adamson
      • Samuel M. Sherman
    • Scénario
      • William Pugsley
      • Samuel M. Sherman
    • Casting principal
      • J. Carrol Naish
      • Lon Chaney Jr.
      • Zandor Vorkov
    • 77avis d'utilisateurs
    • 54avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:26
    Trailer

    Photos89

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 83
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    Rôles principaux28

    Modifier
    J. Carrol Naish
    J. Carrol Naish
    • Dr. Durea…
    Lon Chaney Jr.
    Lon Chaney Jr.
    • Groton
    • (as Lon Chaney)
    Zandor Vorkov
    Zandor Vorkov
    • Count Dracula
    Anthony Eisley
    Anthony Eisley
    • Mike Howard
    Regina Carrol
    Regina Carrol
    • Judith Fontaine
    Russ Tamblyn
    Russ Tamblyn
    • Rico
    Jim Davis
    Jim Davis
    • Sgt. Martin
    John Bloom
    John Bloom
    • The Frankenstein Monster
    Shelly Weiss
    • The Creature (in the film's finale)
    Greydon Clark
    Greydon Clark
    • Strange
    Angelo Rossitto
    Angelo Rossitto
    • Grazbo
    Ann Morell
    • Samantha
    • (as Anne Morrell)
    William Bonner
    William Bonner
    • Biker
    Forrest J. Ackerman
    Forrest J. Ackerman
    • Dr. Beaumont
    • (as Forest J Ackerman)
    Maria Lease
    • Joanie Fontaine
    Bruce Kimball
    Bruce Kimball
    • Ed - the Biker
    Albert Cole
    Albert Cole
    • Cop Driving Car at Beach
    Gary Kent
    Gary Kent
    • Bob
    • Réalisation
      • Al Adamson
      • Samuel M. Sherman
    • Scénario
      • William Pugsley
      • Samuel M. Sherman
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs77

    3,52.3K
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    4capkronos

    Only the most dedicated horror fans need apply. Others beware!

    BLOOD SEEKERS was Adamson's unfinished gore epic that was filmed in the late 60s. He decided to shoot framing scenes adding the whole Dracula-Frankenstein angle later on, and the whole package goes as follows...

    Mad Dr. Frankenstein (J. Carroll Naish) is busy at work reconstructing dead bodies while retarded manservant Groton (Lon Chaney, Jr.) spends most of the time whimpering and petting a puppy. When the doctor injects Groton with a special serum it transforms him into a lurking, laughing, sweating, beach-bunny-decapitating, axe murderer. The cops are already after them, but even more troubles arise when the echo-voiced Count Dracula (Zandor Vorkov) arrives and blackmails the mad doc into resurrecting the Frankenstein monster and giving him the blood of his victims!

    Meanwhile, in Las Vegas, a lounge singer (Regina Carroll) performs a lounge act called "She Travels Light." They try to make it look like it's a big production number by filming it in a large auditorium, but we only see an audience of about four people. Miss Carrol gets news of her sister's disappearance and heads off to Venice Beach looking for answers. She goes to a club, is slipped LSD in her coffee, has a substandard 70s trip out scene, then teams up with three hippies (led by Anthony Eisley) to find out what's going on.

    Possibly Adamson's most famous film, and even though it's cheap, silly, trashy and completely nonsensical, there's enough going on here (and an interesting enough cast) to qualify it as a must see to die-hard horror fans. The cast is just overloaded with familiar faces! Aside from those already mentioned, Russ Tamblyn, Jim Davis, Forry Ackerman, Angelo Rossitto, Gary Kent and other swell folks appear and future director Greydon Clark (of SATAN'S CHERRLEADERS fame) also has a small role. If none of those names are ringing a bell, then you may not be as amused by what you see here.

    Side note--Some nudity and violence seem to have been removed so it could pass with a PG rating.
    6Cinemayo

    Dracula vs. Frankenstein (1971) **1/2

    Director Al Adamson's most popular "masterpiece" is often both revered and reviled, but I'm not ashamed to say that I like it. For fans of the old Universal monster mashes of the 1940s, this film sort of updates the exploits of Count Dracula and Frankenstein's Monster to the "modern" times of the late '60s and early '70s. What's interesting is that it was never intended as such when the movie was first conceived...

    Originally begun in 1969, producer Sam Sherman and director Adamson wanted to make a biker flick which would kind of be a semi-sequel to their recent SATAN'S SADISTS hit movie. They started shooting with Russ Tamblyn picked to reprise his role of a motorcycle hoodlum and then added a new plot where a mad doctor would be conducting weird experiments on young girls, having his deformed servant stalk them with an ax, supplying their blood to the doctor. At this point the film was going under a title of THE BLOOD SEEKERS or BLOOD FREAKS, and then later it was decided to consider the crazed scientist to be none other than Dr. Frankenstein, so the tentative title became BLOOD OF FRANKENSTEIN. But still the concept changed, and eventually came to include the marketable characters of Dracula and the Frankenstein Monster - and over a course of three years, footage was added or changed or deleted in order to create what's now known as Dracula VS. FRANKENSTEIN (1971). Whew!

    In the finished movie, Count Dracula (played by a deliciously incompetent curly-haired & goatee'd stockbroker named Roger Engel, adopting a dopey pseudonym of "Zandor Vorkov") digs up the comatose Frankenstein Monster (7' 4" accountant John Bloom) and makes a deal with the elderly Dr. Frankenstein. The infamous doctor (played by an aged J. Carrol Naish in his last role, who has trouble reading cue cards and whose dentures can be heard clacking away as he delivers idiotic dialog) is operating under the phony moniker of Dr. Duryea, and runs a Creature Emporium Sideshow at a local amusement park. The show merely serves as a front for his gruesome blood experiments which he conducts down in the basement. Duryea frequently injects a serum into an over-sized half-wit named Groton (played by horror veteran Lon Chaney Jr., now sadly bloated and ravaged from years of alcohol abuse) transforming him into a "mad zombie". Growling and prowling under the boardwalk on the beach at night with an ax, Groton decapitates young girls for his master's sinister plans. Regina Carrol (wife of director Adamson) plays an older sister of one of the female victim's, who meets up with over-aged hippie Anthony Eisley to find out what happened to the girl, but gets tangled up in the web of Frankenstein and Dracula. Angelo Rossitto (who co-starred with Bela Lugosi in the '40s) is also on hand as a shady dwarf who takes tickets outside of Dr. Duryea's Creature Emporium. The one casualty of the final film who gets a raw deal is Russ Tamblyn, whose few surviving scenes from the original biker fiasco now seem out of place in a revamped movie about monsters and maniacs.

    Okay - technically, this is a "bad" film, there's no way to get around that. But it's also a good deal of fun if you take it in the right spirit. It's colorful, "groovy," and is a final showcase for seasoned horror pros Lon Chaney and J. Carrol Naish, even if they are on their last legs. Despite the fact that Lon could barely talk and therefore remained mute for the movie, much to his credit he is still able to elicit sympathy and pathos in his scenes. For fans of the old monsters, it's a kick to see updated (re: early '70s) manifestations of Dracula and the Monster as they arrive into the 20th century: Dracula not only looks like a mod, he actually speaks in a voice that echos through a loudspeaker (don't ask me why) and shoots death rays from his ring; the murderous monster has a mashed-potato face that looks like it was stung by a horde of a thousand bees, and he even gets to strangle none other than Forrest J. Ackerman, celebrated editor of FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND magazine! The final clash of the titans at the end of the film is pretty awesome, considering it was filmed with a practically zero budget and was added as an afterthought. You have to be one of those viewers who "get it" when it comes to appreciating grade-Z, low-level exploitation trash cinema -- but if you do, this is as good as they come and is a cult classic of its type. **1/2 out of ****
    tron-12

    Camp classic! So bad it's good!

    Dracula wears those plastic vampire teeth throughout this awful film that goes nowhere. There's an angry scientist who runs a carnival spook house (he's really Dr. F), the creature known as Grodin played by Lon Chaney Jr., and sci-fi guru Forrest J. Ackerman makes a cameo as a rival scientist who discredited Dr. Frankenstein! There's hippies and bad acting and a midget! (the same guy who played Master-blaster in Mad Max 3) This film has it all!

    In one scene, Dracula (played cunningly by Zandor) appears suddenly in the car of the rival scientist. The man notices that a vampire is in his car and exclaims, in un-enthused B-movie fashion, "Who are you?" Drac responds, "I have been known as the prince of darkness- turn left here." Incredible how bad they can make 'em. See it soon if you love bad movies.
    BaronBl00d

    The Good Ole' Days

    Ah! The 70's was a great time to be growing up a monster fan. Television stations that had little money would show cheap horror movies again and again. Now and then a few of the horror hosts would be around, or horror related shows like Chiller Theatre with its leprous fingers shooting out of the ground and greedily grasping the letters spelling the show's name. Good Times! I, like many of the reviewers here, saw Dracula Vs. Frankenstein at least a few times. There were scenes etched in my mind, most notably the pier and J. Carrol Naish in a wheelchair barking out orders to a grunting, balloon-faced Lon Chaney Jr. I didn't really remember much about the monster, or for that part Dracula, but I gave that up to youth and decided to watch this "classic" of Al Adamson's. Now, I have seen Adamson's work before and knew what to expect. I saw his Blood on Dracula's Castle and Nurse Sherri. They were both real cheap movies but I liked them a lot. So I figured same for this, especially since this one was a part of my cinematic past. Wow! Was I wrong!(guess you knew this was coming!) Dracula was not the only thing that sucked in this picture! This film is a tangled mass(mess) of various plot strands, corny dialogue, bad, bad, bad acting, cheap, cheap, cheap sets and props, worthless cameos by what would have been a great cast twenty years prior to its production, and a pretty feeble direction even by Al Adamson standards(We're talking LOW!) J. Carrol Naish(Yes, the great hunchback from House of Frankenstein) was in a wheelchair(this was his as well as Chaney's last film) playing a Dr. Durea(AKA Dr. Frankenstein) who runs a freak show on the pier in a carnival in California. Almost everything he says is preposterous, idiotic, and totally wooden. His performance is SO wooden, it is as if he were practicing for his casket. Chaney is almost as bad. He look terrible, and its not from make-up. He plays a mute that mumbles and breathes hard named Groton, who likes to cut the heads off of nubile young women with an ax and pet little puppies(an obvious homage/reminder of his performance as Lenny in Of Mice and Men). But wait! We have more has-beens to come. We have Russ Tamblyn as a biker and Jim Davis(with some of the worst one-liners in film) as a policeman. And of course we have Adamson's muse and love interest and wife Regina Carrol(looking as beautiful as ever) as a sister of one of the missing girls. Ms. Carrol actually gives the best performance of the film, except when she sings some interminable Las Vegas show number. Well it seems I have covered everything...wait, what about the two great monsters...the film is about them isn't it? I'm not really sure that is the case, but they are in the film in all their lack of glory. Dracula looks like he just got through teaching the sweathogs on Welcome Back Kotter, and Frankenstein's monster...well, he has definitely seen better days...and better movies. For me, aside from walking down memory lane and being reminded how bad film-making can be, the one real bright spot was seeing Forrest Ackerman in his cameo. He once told me how he did this film as a favor for Al, and how he broke his glasses during the shoot and was not paid for either the cameo or the glasses. Good times!
    Bruce_Cook

    The Amazing Collosal Adamson strikes again

    You have to give credit to producer-director Al Adamson he has a rare talent for getting well-known actors to star in his atrocious movies. This film (and several other Adamson projects) was put together slowly over a period of years. What Adamson ended up with was a film that features J. Carrol Naish (in his last role) as Dr. Frankenstein, living under an alias while he manages an amusement park (!), Lon Chaney, Jr. (in his last role) is Frankenstein's moron assistant who obediently fetches the heads of young girls. Russ Tamblyn ("West Side Story", "tom thumb") plays an aging biker. Even Jim Davis (Jock Ewing from "Dallas") has a part in this disaster. And Forest J. Ackerman (editor of Famous Monsters of Filmland) is one of the monster's victims, along with Anthony Eisley ("The Navy versus the Night Monster").

    Adamson also manages to insult several famous props from classic films; some of the lab equipment he used is from "The Bride of Frankenstein". Adamson's busty blond wife (Regina Carrol) is bitten by Dracula (played by an actor named Zandor Vorkov, who looks like Frank Zappa in "Kiss" makeup). Frankenstein also has a dwarf assistant, played by Angelo Rossitto, who starred in the bizarre 1932 film "Freaks". All in all, a remarkable film from the man who gave the world "Blood of Ghastly Horror".

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      J. Carrol Naish was very old and frail at the time that this film was made and, as a result, he could no longer remember dialogue, so he read his lines in it off of cue cards. However, he had only one working eye; the other one had been replaced with a glass eye long ago. In Naish's close-ups in the film with dialogue, one eye can be seen moving back and forth when he is reading his lines, while the other eye does not move at all.
    • Gaffes
      J. Carrol Naish's character of Dr. Durea / Dr. Frankenstein first refers to Lon Chaney Jr.'s character as "Grodin," although his name in the film is actually "Groton." After that one time, Naish gets it right from that point onward.
    • Citations

      Dracula: [to the Frankenstein Monster, who is attacking Dracula in pain after a lit car flare has been shoved into his face by Mike Howard, temporarily blinding him] No, him! Him! Him! No! Him! Him!

    • Crédits fous
      For his bit part of Dr. Beaumont in this film, Forrest J Ackerman's first name is misspelled as "Forest" in both the opening credits and the closing credits.
    • Versions alternatives
      According to the film's co-producer, co-director and co-writer, Samuel M. Sherman, its TV release version removed the brief topless nudity of the girl on Dr. Durea / Dr. Frankenstein's operating table. It also removed a sign that said "Society Sucks".
    • Connexions
      Edited into FrightMare Theater: Dracula vs Frankenstein (2018)
    • Bandes originales
      Here and Now
      Words and Music by J.D. Lobue

      ASCAP

      Recorded by Communication Plus

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Dracula vs. Frankenstein?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • décembre 1971 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Dracula à la recherche de Frankenstein
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Somers, New York, États-Unis(the old abandoned church)
    • Société de production
      • Independent-International Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 31 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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