Plot
Everyone thinks that Dracula is dead after Professor Van Helsing killed him ten years
earlier. Four English tourists stray into his old
castle in the Carpathian Mountains and are met by Dracula's servant, Klove.
After being welcomed and treated to a meal, the tourists settle down for the night
but one of them is curious
when they see Klove dragging a case down into the basement. He follows Klove
down there who proceeds to kill him and uses his blood to resurrect Dracula,
unleashing his evil on the world once again.
Review
The third installment of the Hammer Dracula films is
the first true sequel to Horror of Dracula and sees the welcome return of
Christopher Lee into the title role. He had decided to wait eight years before
donning the cape again for fear of being typecast (which is ironic since he went
on to star as Dracula in around eight films during his illustrious career!) but
in all honesty, it probably wasn't worth the effort. Whilst nowhere near
as memorable as the original, Dracula, Prince of Darkness is perhaps the
best of the sequels although it works better as a collection of iconic vampiric
set pieces rather than a fully rounded film. At least the film gathers the best that
the studio had
to offer in the form of director Terence Fisher, composer James Bernard and writer Jimmy Sangster
who all contribute their individual pieces to the film in classic Hammer style.
Dracula, Prince of Darkness opens with the
final scenes from Horror of Dracula to fill you in with what happened
(and also hastens to remind us of how good it was). The film then immediately
begins to suffer from the same problems as the rest of the sequels. It simply
doesn't know what to do with Dracula apart from having him hiss and growl into
the camera and then seduce some nubile young women. The first half of the film is centered around the the resurrection of Dracula but once he's back
in business, the
film hits a brick wall. You wonder why they bothered including him in the first
place and it may have been better had they just continued with the same theme as
Brides of Dracula, featuring Van Helsing as the main character and
introducing a new vampire threat. Like many earlier Hammer films, the pace is
deliberate and the tone is foreboding. The film takes time to set up it's story
and characters, realizing that in order to care about people when threatened
with evil, we need to know about them and their situation beforehand. It's a
little tedious at times and some of the stupidity of the characters beggars
belief (the contrived circumstances in which the four people find themselves at
Dracula's old castle will have you shaking your head - despite all of the
warnings, all of the doomsayers and all of the evidence to the contrary, the
characters still decide to stay there and look what happens!). Once Dracula has
been resurrected, the film quickly goes through the usual motions of having him
assemble a coven of lustful slaves to prey on whilst the vampire hunter rallies
the troops and then finally confronts Dracula. This last sequence of events
really seems rushed and had they introduced Dracula a little earlier in the
film, they could have built up the finale a little more. Instead, the ending is
left open for a further series of sequels, each one featuring more absurd ways
of resurrecting Dracula.
Dracula, Prince of Darkness contains possibly
one of Hammer's greatest ever scenes - that of Dracula's resurrection. Klove
brutally slays one of the guests and hangs him above a coffin containing
Dracula's ashes, allowing the blood to gush out and spill over them,
reforming Dracula. It's an amazing sequence both in it's violent nature and then
in it's spine-chilling conclusion as the Count arises to strike terror into the
world once more. Coupled with James Bernard's memorable score, the scene is
Gothic horror at it's finest. Up there alongside the best scenes of the film is
the moment where one of the female vampires is manhandled in the monastery by
the monks who then promptly proceed to stake her in a most ruthless fashion. For
1966, these scenes are brutally effective. The traditional Hammer period setting is used to
full effect here although if you think you recognize everything, it may be
because both this and Rasputin: the Mad Monk were filmed by Hammer in
1966 and they share the same sets (as well as the same cast - economic
filmmaking at it's finest!). Christopher Lee is back in the cape and although he
only appears half-way through and doesn't speak a word (apparently his lines
were so poorly written that Lee refused to speak them), his performance is
still mesmerizing. He uses tools of the trade mostly forgotten about nowadays -
the expressions on his face, his piercing eyes and his body language - to become
a powerful and seductive figure, towering over the rest of the cast. In taking a
personal stance against the treatment of Bram Stoker's novel, Lee turned the
role into something more memorable than he could have envisioned. Andrew Kier takes over the Van Helsing-like role as
the local vampire slaying priest. He's no Peter Cushing but Kier is an excellent
deputy, more than matching up to Dracula and his minions.
Barbara Shelley, one of Hammer's most common leading ladies in
their earlier days, is equally as memorable as the frigid Helen who is corrupted
by Dracula and turned into an alluring sexual vampire slave. Finally amongst the
cast, note must be given to Phillip Latham as Klove. His entrance alongside
James Bernard's haunting music tricks the audience into thinking it's the Count
himself. But he's just as sinister and deadly, acting as the vocal piece for
Dracula throughout the film.
Verdict
Dracula,
Prince of Darkness contains some truly classic Hammer moments which
unfortunately mask over a flimsy plot and poor pacing. For these reasons, it
will never be considered a true classic but for fans of Hammer or vampire films
in general, this one should be compulsive viewing.