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Dracula

  • TV Mini Series
  • 2020
  • 13
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
55K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,459
51
Dracula (2020)
He's been around for centuries, but what happens when a worthy adversary bites back? From the makers of "Sherlock," Claes Bang stars as Dracula in this brand-new series inspired by Bram Stoker's classic novel.
Play trailer1:35
6 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark FantasyMonster HorrorPeriod DramaSupernatural HorrorVampire HorrorActionDramaFantasyHorrorThriller

In 1897 Transylvania, the blood-drinking Count draws his plans against Victorian London.In 1897 Transylvania, the blood-drinking Count draws his plans against Victorian London.In 1897 Transylvania, the blood-drinking Count draws his plans against Victorian London.

  • Creators
    • Mark Gatiss
    • Steven Moffat
  • Stars
    • Claes Bang
    • Dolly Wells
    • Morfydd Clark
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    55K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,459
    51
    • Creators
      • Mark Gatiss
      • Steven Moffat
    • Stars
      • Claes Bang
      • Dolly Wells
      • Morfydd Clark
    • 1.3KUser reviews
    • 73Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 8 nominations total

    Episodes3

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2020

    Videos6

    Final Trailer
    Trailer 1:35
    Final Trailer
    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 0:47
    Teaser Trailer
    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 0:47
    Teaser Trailer
    Dracula
    Trailer 0:47
    Dracula
    Dracula: Season 1
    Trailer 1:31
    Dracula: Season 1
    Dracula
    Trailer 0:42
    Dracula
    The Trailer Trailer for the Week of Dec. 16, 2019
    Video 1:00
    The Trailer Trailer for the Week of Dec. 16, 2019

    Photos232

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    Top cast49

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    Claes Bang
    Claes Bang
    • Dracula
    • 2020
    Dolly Wells
    Dolly Wells
    • Sister Agatha
    • 2020
    Morfydd Clark
    Morfydd Clark
    • Mina
    • 2020
    Jonathan Aris
    Jonathan Aris
    • Captain Sokolov
    • 2020
    Lydia West
    Lydia West
    • Lucy
    • 2020
    John Heffernan
    John Heffernan
    • Jonathan Harker
    • 2020
    Matthew Beard
    Matthew Beard
    • Jack
    • 2020
    Sacha Dhawan
    Sacha Dhawan
    • Dr Sharma
    • 2020
    Mark Gatiss
    Mark Gatiss
    • Frank
    • 2020
    Joanna Scanlan
    Joanna Scanlan
    • Mother Superior
    • 2020
    Nathan Stewart-Jarrett
    Nathan Stewart-Jarrett
    • Adisa
    • 2020
    Clive Russell
    Clive Russell
    • Valentin
    • 2020
    Chanel Cresswell
    Chanel Cresswell
    • Kathleen
    • 2020
    Lujza Richter
    Lujza Richter
    • Elena
    • 2020
    Lyndsey Marshal
    Lyndsey Marshal
    • Bloxham
    • 2020
    Catherine Schell
    Catherine Schell
    • Duchess Valeria
    • 2020
    Petra Dubayova
    • Carriage Girl
    • 2020
    Youssef Kerkour
    Youssef Kerkour
    • Olgaren
    • 2020
    • Creators
      • Mark Gatiss
      • Steven Moffat
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews1.3K

    6.855.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7Stevieboy666

    "I'm a vampire! Why have you given me a toilet?"

    Saw the trailer for the new BBC TV adaptation of Dracula, the Count spouting humorous one liners and the action taking place in both the 19th and 21st Centuries I was not sure if I wanted to devote 4.5 hours of my time to watching this. But I'm a big Dracula fan, plus I like Mark Gatiss so how could I resist? I couldn't. Divided into 3 episodes the first was for me the best. This is the beginning, set in the Old Country at Dracula's foreboding castle. Very impressive, the sets, the stunning location, superb special effects. It is also pretty scary. great acting. The only thing caught me off guard was having Van Helsing as a female, but it kind of worked and it is essential to treat that this as a "Based On" adaptation of Bram Stoker's novel, or in other words a re-imagining. Pretty much the entire length of part 2 takes place on board the boat to England. It is good, thankfully the various characters help make it interesting, but it is a tad too long. Part 3 takes place over 100 years later in modern day England. This one is by far the most reworked part of the story. I like the idea of this but do feel that the writers are trying to be too clever for their own good with this section and the humour detracts from the horror, though it still has plenty of scary moments. I am glad that I watched the series, despite initial reservations. Like I have mentioned this is very much a modern reworking of the novel (none of the film adaptations follow the book exactly), watch it with an open mind. It's not going to please everyone but despite all the negative reviews so far it does have a respectable current average score of 7/10.
    6williamwilson-63268

    First two episodes are good.

    The third episode was simply terrible. It's a shame because the first two were pretty good. I don't know what they were thinking with the third, it's absurd and very out of place with the other two.
    5leasmith-25365

    Ruined by the youthful 3rd episode...

    It was fantastic for the first 2 seasons, well written, brilliantly acted and amazing direction...that being said the 3rd episode was atrocious, clearly pandering for the urban youth, the current London setting, the adulterous storyline, it was like a really bad episode of black mirror, the fearless youth "not scared of anything" ridiculous notion, it could have been infinitely more, they could have cut the nonsense youth side cast out completely and focused on Draculas journey in the new world, a real shame as while it takes up about 20% of the 3rd episode its knocked its score from a solid 9 to an average 5.
    5Fortressofdoors

    From excitement to eyeroll in just 3 episodes

    The first episode was excellent and I was gladly went into episode 2. There were some (what seemed to me) extreme liberties taken, and I was still on board at that point. Ok, I don't mind a little deviation, let's see how it goes. Then episode 3 started and I was in full disbelief the whole time. They must have gotten David Benioff, D.B. Weiss to write that one.
    8Bertaut

    A sarcastic posthumanist Dracula won't be to everyone's taste, but I thoroughly enjoyed this unique take on the Count

    Bram Stoker's 1897 novel, Dracula, has seen over 350 adaptations for the screen (big and small), with many of them using the original tex to explore some of the socio-political issues of the day. So, for example, Tod Browning's Dracula (1931) turns the count into an elegant aristocrat analogous to the various monarchs in power across Europe at the time; the nine Hammer Horror films from 1958-1974 are at least partially structured around simple Cold War good/bad-west/east dichotomy politics; Francis Ford Coppola's Dracula (1992), which was made at a time when the media were in the habit of making superstars of criminals, very much leans into the idea of the seductive power of evil. And now we have this latest BBC adaptation, created by Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat. Running a hefty 270 minutes (divided into three episodes of 90 minutes each), the series seeks to capture the tone of the original novel, if not necessarily the plot. Extremely funny in places, extremely disturbing in others, this is probably the best small screen adaptation since Philip Saville's superb Count Dracula (1977). There are some problems, and fans of the novel have taken especial (and not entirely unjustified) umbrage with the unexpected narrative shift in the last episode, but all in all, helped in no small part by an immense central performance, I thoroughly enjoyed this version.

    Hungry, 1897; Jonathan Harker (John Heffernan), an English lawyer sent to Transylvania some months prior, has become a shell of a man. Physically deformed and mentally fragile, he is now staying at a small convent. Having written an account of his experiences, Harker is being interviewed by the acerbic Sister Agatha (a superb Dolly Wells), who is hoping he can fill in some of the details he left absent from his document. And so he tells how he came to Transylvania to meet the elderly Dracula (an exceptional Claes Bang having the time of his life), and of the subsequent horrors he experienced.

    Whereas the novel begins just before Harker arrives at Castle Dracula, the show begins with him already in a nunnery in Hungry, having fled the castle, and the novel's multi-perspective epistolary narrative is replaced with a more basic single-character flashback-style narration. Opening this way is a wise move, as it alerts the audience immediately that this isn't a 1:1 adaptation. Unfortunately, because the show deviates so much from the novel, and because the third episode is so unexpected and unique, discussing much about the overarching narrative design lends itself to spoilers.

    Indeed, the same could also be said of the aesthetics, with each episode looking and feeling substantially different from the other two, but in such a way that to go into detail would spoil the nature of the final episode. In any case, the first episode is your basic gothic horror full of deep shadows, huge towers, labyrinthine interiors, and ominous opulence; the second is a ship-based murder-mystery along the lines of Murder on the Orient Express (except, of course, we all know who the killer is from the start); and the third is a gaudy, postmodernist-infused examination of youthful vapidity, corporate greed, decadence for decadence sake, and the all-conquering power of superficiality. Arwel Jones's production design across all three episodes is simply stunning; from the twisting staircases and dead-end tunnels of Castle Dracula to the weather-beaten Demeter (the doomed ship in the second episode) to Dracula's quite stunning residence in the third episode, everything on screen seems completely real and the world feels legitimately lived in. Costume designer Sarah Arthur also deserves praise, especially for her work in the first episode, where Harker's disintegrating mental and physical state is matched by his increasingly shabby clothing.

    And there are some really extraordinary visual moments here. A close-up of a fly crawling on an eyeball, for example, which then crawls behind the eyeball is particularly disturbing (indeed flies are a recurring visual motif throughout the show), as is a scene where Dracula quite literally climbs out of a wolf (shot practically on set without any CGI). The exterior shots of Castle Dracula are also amazing, and why wouldn't they be as the show uses the incredible Orava Castle in Slovakia, which was also used for Nosferatu le vampire (1922).

    The acting is also terrific, particularly Bang and Wells, who both get to have tremendous fun; Bang as the sarcastic Count and Wells as perhaps the most irreverent nun ever committed to screen. Much of the strength of their performances comes in how well they handle the incredibly dry humour, of which there is a surprising amount (although Bang can also be truly terrifying when necessary). So, for example, when the convent is surrounded by hundreds of bats, and Agatha is asked "why would the forces of darkness wish to attack a convent", to which she replies (completely deadpan), "perhaps they're sensitive to criticism." Dracula also gets in on the comedy. Explaining to Harker how he has had artists paint the sun for him, he then says, "And Mozart wrote such a pretty little tune", before mumbling to himself, "I really should have spared him". The nonchalant way Bang delivers the line is hilarious, as if it's only just occurred to him (not to mention that it ties into real-world speculation about what actually killed Mozart). Later on, he points out, "I'm undead - I'm not unreasonable". As the show goes on, Bang gets to show more of his range, bringing out not just Dracula's confidence and sarcasm, but so too his pride, frustration, boredom, and fears, culminating in an exceptional final scene, with Bang doing some truly wonderful silent acting.

    Thematically, the show deconstructs much traditional vampire lore, particularly the power of crucifixes. Exactly why Dracula would fear the cross when he doesn't believe in God is a theme that spans all three episodes. Along the same lines, Dracula's immortality is examined in light of the boredom that it must entail and the irony of how a creature of death can't know death itself ("in a world of travelled roads, death is the last unprinted snow"). Similar deconstruction of Dracula's need for blood sees it presented more like an addiction than a necessity. And, of course, as in so many vampire movies, the show examines the idea that evil can be seductive, suggesting that if evil is sexy and alluring, if it's attractive, it can be difficult to resist.

    As for problems, many viewers despised the last episode, and I can see why (although I loved it), as it takes things in a wholly new, totally unexpected direction that asks more than a little leap of faith from the audience. Certainly, if the first two episodes form a broadly coherent unit, the third disrupts everything, and is thematically, aesthetically, and tonally divorced from its predecessors. Some of the humour in this episode also pushes things a little too far, with one joke in particular crossing the line into farce. I'm also not sure the show needed to be as long as it is; three 60 minute episodes probably would have sufficed.

    That aside though, I loved this adaptation. Purists' disdain for it is understandable, but to my mind, it captures much of the tonal qualities of the original very well. Much like Coppola's version, it deviates wildly from the book but is made by people who are clearly familiar with the source and respectful of its mythology. Featuring a suitably posthumanist Dracula for our jaded times, Gatiss and Moffat may not have pleased traditionalists, but this is a very fine attempt to bring Dracula into the 21st century without ever losing sight of his origins and raison d'être.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The exterior shots of Castle Dracula were filmed at Orava Castle, which is situated on a high rock above Orava river in the village of Oravský Podzámok, Slovakia. This is the same castle that appeared in the silent horror classic Nosferatu le vampire (1922).
    • Connections
      Featured in Neil Brand's Sound of TV: Theme Tunes (2020)

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    FAQ18

    • How many seasons does Dracula have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 4, 2020 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (United Kingdom)
      • Official Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Drácula
    • Filming locations
      • Orava Castle, Oravsky Podzámok, Slovakia(Castle of Dracula)
    • Production companies
      • Hartswood Films
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Netflix
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.00 : 1

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