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Avis de la communauté (5)
Not as funny as I remembered it, still has a few good one liners though.
I was looking for comedic horror and found it. Had me in stitches in a few places. Recommended if you want to get into the Halloween mood but not watch traditional horror.
So many good vampire horror movies throughout the ages: _What We Do in the Shadows_ (2014), _Dracula: Dead and Loving It_ (1995), _My Best Friend's a Vampire_ (1987). Before all of those, we had this one. Too bad it's not very good. The movie builds off of classic Dracula lore - if you're ever seen any Dracula movie or read the book, that's what this is working with. Only difference is this is set in 1970's New York. The movie is start-to-finish jokes, trouble is none of them land. I might have given a strong exhalation once, but that was the closest I came to laughing. If you need an idea of the type of humor, think _Airplane!_ (1980), only not funny at all. What's weird is this movie is older than _Airplane!_, has the same feel, and has two sequences at the airport. Weird. The only real highlight was Hamilton as Dracula. He really could have been a great Lugosi-esque vampire in a serious horror movie. Likewise for Arte Johnson as Renfield. He had the Dwight Frye laugh down perfectly. If the movie would have been just the two of them bumbling around NY, trying to find chicks, that would have been better. As is, the movie is very weak. The only part I will remember is referring to a bat as a black chicken.
Painfully unfunny. Abysmal actually would be a better word. Fun fact: this is the 1st of 2 vampire comedies Richard Benjamin was the exact same character in, and both movies are total stinkers.
Yikes. That was painfully unfunny. The string of corny one-liners that don't land at all are almost cringeworthy. The premise of Dracula wandering around in the 70s is kind of amusing, but was done better by Christopher Lee.