

“He renounced his faith to become immortal. Passion, anger, vengeance, and hatred will be unleashed into the modern world.”
Budget
$52M
Revenue
$34M
In 15th-century Wallachia, Prince Vlad learns of his wife's brutal murder while fighting the Ottomans. In his despair, he renounces God and Heaven—and is cursed with immortality, reborn as Dracula. Over four centuries, he carves a bloody path across Europe in search of Elisabeta's reincarnation. When he finally finds her, he faces an impossible choice: condemn her to his eternal darkness, or let her go forever. This is the story of a man who became a monster to reclaim his soul.
I grew up with Coppola's romantic gothic masterpiece, so I walked into Besson's version with skepticism. The moment I saw Caleb Landry Jones on screen, my doubts vanished. His eyes hold not rage, but an indescribable exhaustion and grief. This Dracula is a prince who defied God for love. The battle scenes carry Besson's signature; each strike feels like a scream. Christoph Waltz's priest embodies the cold intellect lurking within the darkness. But what truly broke me was Danny Elfman's score. When Dracula touches Mina for the first time in four centuries, the strings swell with such aching tenderness that something inside you fractures. This isn't a horror film. It's an elegy for a man stubborn enough to search four hundred years for someone he lost. Waiting 400 years... If that's true love, it's both terrifying and beautiful.
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