A trio of tales told portmanteau style with Boris Karloff as your host;
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BLOOD FOR DRACULA (1974)
Certification18 Our Rating
The funniest, sexiest and most stylish Dracula film ever! Made by Andy Warhol's sidekick, Blood for Dracula follows the tortured, vegetarian Count as he and his menacing manservant set forth for Italy in the early 19th century, complete with coffin on roof-rack, searching for juicy Catholic virgins. Visually stunning and deliciously deadpan.
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DRACULA: PAGES FROM A VIRGIN'S DIARY (2002)
Certification15 Our Rating
Dracula goes art house in an interpretation by Guy Maddin and the Winnipeg National Ballet of Bram Stoker's classic blood sucker. Dracula - Pages From a Virgin's Diary is a visually gorgeous affair, elegantly choreographed and atmospherically shot in sepia, it is also not without wit, which breathes much needed life into the proceedings.
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FRIGHT NIGHT (1985)
Certification18 Our Rating
This camp classic from the 1980's sees young Charley Brewster teaming up with a faded TV star to fight off some not so friendly-neighborhood-vampires.
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HORROR OF DRACULA (1957)
Certification15 Our Rating
Now regarded as a classic, this is the first Dracula film that Hammer Horror made. Bits such as the famous opening shot with the menacing shadow of Lee gliding down the stairs to emerge as a crisply charming aristocrat, still look excellent. Required viewing for horror buffs.
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MARTIN (2007)
Certification15 Our Rating
Martin is a great film, easily another of Romero's classics - a shocking tale of vampires and psychotics, razor blades and sexuality from the fantastic opening sequence in a railway compartment through the desolate wasteland of Pittsburgh - and deals with a teenager called Martin who is forced to stay with an eccentric religious uncle, who believes him to be a vampire in a family with a long history of vampiric offspring. Is he really a vampire, or has he just some really messed up dysfunctional
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NOSFERATU: A SYMPHONY OF TERROR (1922)
Certification12 Our Rating
Seminal vampire film, the first to be based upon the Bram Stoker tale. An estate agent's clerk from Bremen embarks on a journey to Orlock's castle, where a client of his resides. On arrival, the full horror of the inhabitants confront him. Wonderful imagery and direction. Imitated but never equalled.
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THIRST (2009)
Certification18 Our Rating
From the man who brought you 'The Vengeance Trilogy' comes the greatest achievement in vampire resurgence yet. A Catholic priest turned vampire (during a dangerous medical trial) unwittingly falls in love with his friend's wife... the beginning of a tempestuous relationship.
A expertly told and beautifully shot tragedy - 'Thirst' is a highly enjoyable sensory experience.
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TWILIGHT (2008)
Certification12 Our Rating
Bella Swan has always been a little bit different, never caring about fitting in and, when her mother sends her to live with her father in the rainy little town Forks, Washington, she doesn't expect much of anything to change, that is, until she meets the moody, broody Edward. There is only one, sizable, problem to the teenagers' burgeoning romance: Edward is a vampire and as their relationship grows he finds it increasingly difficult to fight the urge to bite his human love. Adapted from the hu
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