Year Of The Vampire: Dracula Dead And Loving It Doesn’t Suck

(Welcome to Year of the Vampire, a series examining the greatest, strangest, and sometimes overlooked vampire movies of all time in honor of “Nosferatu,” which turns 100 this year.)Comedy legend Mel Brooks ended his career on low note, with his final film “Dracula Dead and Loving It” bombing at the box office in 1995 and going down as one of his worst-rated films.

The legend had seemingly lost his touch — the former Academy Award winner (his debut feature “The Producers” won Best Original Screenplay) failed to satisfy either critics or audiences, with the current Rotten Tomatoes score being a pathetic 11 among critics and…The post Year of the Vampire: Dracula Dead And Loving It Doesn’t Suck appeared first on /Film.

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