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Thursday, May 28, 2026

House of the Dead (2003) – Review

Uwe Boll once described 2003’s House of the Dead as a prequel to the 1997 arcade game, which is already a sentence that should have triggered a wellness check. The original game barely had a plot beyond “shoot the zombies before they eat your face,” so naturally someone decided it needed lore. What we got instead is less a prequel and more a cautionary tale about what happens when a director is handed a camera and zero adult supervision.

A group of college students: Simon (Tyron Leitso) and Greg (Will Sanderson), along with Alicia (Ona Grauer), Karma (Enuka Okuma), and Cynthia (Sonya Salomaa), who miss their scheduled boat to a rave on the charmingly named Isla del Morte, which translates to “please turn around immediately.” Fortunately, they find Captain Victor Kirk (Jürgen Prochnow) and his first mate, Salish (Clint Howard), who agree to ferry them over for a suspiciously large sum of money. Nothing says “good life decision” like bribing a sketchy boat captain to rush you to a place called Death Island.

 

“Trust me. I used to be a U-Boat captain.”

They arrive to find the rave site trashed and deserted, which would be a pretty strong hint to leave if these characters had even the faintest survival instincts. Instead, they split up, because of course they do. Cynthia stays behind with Greg for sex, gets left alone for five seconds, and is promptly turned into zombie chow. Meanwhile, the others wander into a decrepit house where they meet Rudy (Jonathan Cherry), Hugh (Michael Eklund), and Liberty (Kira Clavell), survivors of what was apparently the worst rave in human history. They all decide the best plan is to regroup at the original death trap.

 

The castaways on Gilligan’s Island were brighter than this group.

Back at the rave site, things escalate when Zombie Cynthia pops out and kills Hugh before being put down by Coast Guard officer Casper (Ellie Cornell), who arrives just in time to join the worst group project ever assembled. The survivors attempt to escape via Kirk’s boat, only to find it overrun with zombies. Casper and Greg head off for help, which is code for “Greg dies in the woods,” leaving the rest to listen to Kirk explain the island’s backstory: an evil 15th-century priest named Castillo Sermano (David Palffy) conducted forbidden experiments, achieved immortality, and apparently never considered redecorating.

 

“Are we dealing with an undead mad scientist?”

Armed with a conveniently hidden cache of weapons, the group decides to fight their way back to the house, where more people die in increasingly dumb ways. Kirk goes out in a blaze of dynamite-fuelled glory, Simon sacrifices himself with a gunpowder explosion, and Karma gets picked off in the tunnels because self-sacrifice is apparently contagious. Alicia and Rudy stumble into Castillo, who is now wearing Greg’s face like a Halloween mask. To be fair, I’d also hide my identity if I had appeared in this movie.

 

Surprise, or should I say, who cares?

After escaping, blowing things up again, and Alicia engaging in a sword fight with Castillo (early it was clumsily established that Alicia knew how to fence), and her getting run through by a sword, Rudy decapitates Castillo, and the still-moving body tries one last strangulation attempt because this film refuses to end gracefully. Alicia crushes and staggers to her feet and stomps on the head. They survive thanks to an immortality serum, and Rudy reveals his last name is Curien, which is meant to be a meaningful nod but lands with all the impact of a wet paper towel.

 

“Where do I sign up for the sequel?”

Stray Observations:

• The island is called Isla del Morte, and nobody thinks, “Maybe we hit up a different rave.”
• We get a naked girl swimmer “attacked” by underwater zombies, while her boyfriend is passed out drunk on the beach, because Uwe Boll had seen Jaws.
• Splitting up in a zombie outbreak remains cinema’s most reliable bad decision.
• Cynthia dies because Greg needed a bathroom break. Truly heroic stuff.
• The zombies occasionally move like they’ve been launched out of invisible cannons, which raises several scientific questions the film refuses to acknowledge.
• The sword fight at the end feels like someone changed the channel to a low-budget swashbuckler.
• A character reads from a logbook detailing how the Padre killed the crew and redirected the ship… which raises a tiny logistical question: who exactly stuck around to calmly document all this after being murdered? Ghost stenographer? Zombie with a flair for record-keeping?

 

I’d love to see a zombie’s LinkedIn page.

Uwe Boll’s direction here is less “visionary filmmaker” and more “man aggressively shaking a camera while a playlist fights for dominance.” The hyperactive camerawork and editing feel like they were designed to simulate the experience of being trapped inside a washing machine. Scenes are chopped into incoherent fragments, punctuated by random slow motion and baffling insert shots from the actual video game, as if Boll periodically forgot what medium he was working in.

Filmmaking Tip: Do not remind your audience of things they could be doing rather than watching your stupid movie, like playing the actual game it is based on.

Visually, the film leans into lurid, over-saturated colours that make everything look vaguely radioactive. It’s paired with a soundtrack that can’t decide what it wants to be. One moment, you get fairly standard orchestral scoring, the next it’s early-2000s rap-rock crashing through the speakers like it’s trying to sell you an energy drink. All of it technically functions, in the sense that sound and images are present, but none of it coalesces into anything resembling tone or atmosphere.

An ancient graveyard full of zombies, cue the tecno-mix!

As an adaptation, it’s almost impressive in how thoroughly it misses the point. The original game is simple, kinetic, and fun. A loose adaptation could have leaned into that arcade energy or even the absurdity of its premise. Instead, Boll delivers something that feels both overcomplicated and underdeveloped. There’s a hint of a more interesting concept buried in there, something about social hierarchies flipped by a zombie outbreak, but it never materializes. What we get is a film that takes itself just seriously enough to be tedious, while being too incompetent to be genuinely engaging.

 

It’s also important to care about our heroes, but do we?

Within the zombie genre, House of the Dead occupies a strange niche. It lacks the social commentary of Night of the Living Dead, the kinetic tension of 28 Days Later, or even the grimy fun of low-budget splatter films. Its most unique contribution might be those bizarre, physics-defying zombies that seem to launch themselves through the air like they’ve hit a trampoline just off-screen. It’s the only zombie film where you half-expect one of them to bounce back into frame with a boing sound effect, and when they’re not defying gravity, they look like the kind of rubbery monstrosities you’d get if Roger Corman tried to make an Orc from The Lord of the Rings on a lunch break budget.

 

“Where are the halflings?”

The acting… exists. Jürgen Prochnow brings a sliver of gravitas, likely out of habit, while Clint Howard does his usual “delightfully strange” routine. The younger cast delivers performances that range from flat to accidentally comedic, often sounding like they’re reading their lines off cue cards taped to the nearest zombie. Erica Durance appears briefly, and yes, it includes her only career nude scene, which the film treats as if it’s offering compensation for everything else you’re about to endure. It is not sufficient compensation.

 

“I offered to get naked, but no one seemed interested.”

In conclusion, House of the Dead is the kind of failure that feels almost engineered, as though every creative decision was filtered through a machine designed to produce the least satisfying outcome possible. It’s messy, incoherent, and aggressively styled without ever being stylish. Yet there’s a strange fascination in watching it unravel, like observing a slow-motion train wreck where the conductor occasionally stops to insert arcade footage for no clear reason. Boll would go on to make other video game adaptations, but this one set the tone: a blueprint for how to misunderstand both cinema and the source material in one loud, chaotic swing.

Monday, May 25, 2026

Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966) – Review

Hammer Studios’ Dracula: Prince of Darkness is one of those sequels that defines both the studio’s style and its limitations. It marked Christopher Lee’s triumphant return to the cape after sitting out The Brides of Dracula, and his presence alone gives the film a weight it might otherwise lack. What results is a moody, atmospheric Gothic piece, one that is short on dialogue but long on blood, ritual, and that uniquely Hammer brand of lurid colour.

The film opens with a recap of Hammer’s 1958 Dracula, reminding us of the Count’s fiery destruction at the hands of Van Helsing (Peter Cushing). Flash forward ten years to 1895, where Father Sandor (Andrew Keir) scolds some superstitious villagers for trying to treat an ordinary corpse like a vampire problem. Over a pint at a local inn, Sandor warns four English travellers—the Kent siblings Charles (Francis Matthews) and Diana (Suzan Farmer), plus their companions Alan (Charles Tingwell) and Helen (Barbara Shelley), to steer clear of Karlsbad. Naturally, the tourists do the opposite. Their terrified coach driver abandons them near the ominous Castle Dracula, where a driverless carriage conveniently whisks them the rest of the way. Inside, they’re greeted by Klove (Philip Latham), Dracula’s unnervingly polite servant, who explains that his master’s final wish was to always welcome guests. This is the Hammer equivalent of checking into the Bates Motel.

“Next time, let’s check with Tripadvisor.”

That night, Alan makes the classic horror-movie mistake: he hears a suspicious noise and decides to investigate alone. Down in the castle crypt, he stumbles straight into Klove’s carefully prepared murder scene. What follows is one of Hammer’s most memorable, grisly set-pieces: Alan strung up like a side of beef, slit open, and drained like a vintage bottle of claret, his blood gushing into Dracula’s waiting ashes. Cue the resurrection: the Count returns in a cloud of crimson gore and dry ice, Christopher Lee looming out of the shadows, fangs bared, silent but utterly terrifying. Helen, who has spent most of her time fretting and wringing her hands about the castle’s bad vibes, suddenly finds herself validated, and then immediately vampirized. In no time at all, she’s reborn as one of Dracula’s sultry brides, trading in her anxious pearl-clutching for a wicked smile and a whole lot of bloodlust.

This is why you don’t ignore cryptic warnings.

Helen’s downfall is one of the film’s juiciest ironies. After spending the entire trip warning everyone about ominous castles and bad omens, she’s the one who falls headfirst into Dracula’s clutches. The transformation isn’t subtle, either. One moment, she’s a nervous, wide-eyed tourist clinging to propriety; the next, she’s sashaying around in a low-cut gown with her hair untamed, eyes blazing with hunger. It’s as if Dracula didn’t just drain her blood but rewired her personality overnight. Gone is the fretful traveller, and in her place is a sultry predator with a smirk that says, “I told you something bad would happen, and now I am that something bad.” It’s classic Hammer alchemy: anxious women enter the castle wringing their hands, and five minutes after meeting Dracula, they’re vampy seductresses, batting their eyelashes like they’ve been practising in front of a coffin-shaped mirror.

You have to love the women of Hammer.

Meanwhile, Charles and Diana finally catch on that this “generous host” routine is a death trap, but their realization comes just in time. Dracula makes a grab for Diana, only to be thwarted when she brandishes her crucifix, buying them a narrow escape. Their getaway is anything but smooth, ending in a carriage crash that knocks Diana out cold and forces Charles into full hero mode, hauling her through the dark woods like a determined Victorian action star. Salvation arrives in the form of Father Sandor, who whisks them off to the safety of his abbey. But of course, Dracula isn’t the type to take rejection lying down in his coffin. Klove soon shows up at the abbey doors like a grim deliveryman, hauling in coffins containing both the Count and Helen. Sandor, however, isn’t fooled for a second and refuses them entry, delivering a wonderfully stern “not today, Satan” moment that leaves Dracula seething. Enter Ludwig (Thorley Walters), a mad monk, who happily invites his dark master inside.

Every Dracula needs his Renfield.

Helen tries to trick Diana into opening a window, whispering sweetly like an undead big sister, before suddenly sinking her fangs in. But just as she tastes victory, Dracula yanks her away—after all, he wants Diana for himself, and he doesn’t like to share. Charles and Sandor rush in, arriving just in time to end Helen’s torment with a stake through the heart, giving her one of Hammer’s more hauntingly tragic vampire exits. Sandor then sears Diana’s wound with fire and faith, a desperate, painful remedy that just barely keeps her from turning. Even so, Dracula’s shadow still lingers, his grip tightening as he bends Diana’s will, hypnotizing her into dropping her guard, and slowly grooming her for the ultimate initiation into his dark world.

Dracula, the ultimate ladies’ man.

The final showdown finds Dracula fleeing with Diana in Klove’s wagon, only to be intercepted by Charles and Sandor on horseback. Klove is shot, but the coffin slides onto the frozen moat of Castle Dracula. In the icy climax, Charles attempts to stake the Count, only for Dracula to burst forth and attack. With a well-aimed rifle, Sandor shatters the ice beneath him, sending the Prince of Darkness thrashing into the freezing waters. Diana rescues Charles from the Count’s last desperate grasp, and the ice closes over Dracula, entombing him once more beneath the castle he can never quite leave behind.

The icy tomb of Dracula.

Stray Observation:

• Andrew Keir’s Father Sandor is the MVP of the movie—he interrupts funerals, scolds priests, downs beer like a champ, and still has time to take on Dracula. Basically, Van Helsing with more attitude and a bigger appetite.
• The Kents prove once again that English tourists are the most stubborn people alive. Told explicitly not to go to Karlsbad? They go straight to Karlsbad. Abandoned by their coach driver? “Oh, look, a creepy castle with no host, let’s move in!”
• The driverless carriage gag is peak Gothic absurdity. You’d think the tourists might ask, “So… who’s driving this thing?” but no, they just hop in like it’s the Transylvanian Uber.
• Diana wields her crucifix like a pro, but somehow never thinks to keep it on hand at all times. Rookie mistake.
• Helen spends the first half of the movie whining about how dangerous the castle is—only to become Dracula’s most enthusiastic convert.

Honestly, she’s never looked happier.

After The Brides of Dracula had sidelined the Count in favour of his “disciples,” Dracula: Prince of Darkness was Hammer’s correction: Christopher Lee was Dracula, and audiences wanted him back. His resurrection gave the series its proper continuity, even if Peter Cushing’s Van Helsing was now missing. The movie set a template for later entries: Dracula revived through ritual, a fresh set of English victims lured to Transylvania, and a climactic “novel” death scene. It cemented Hammer’s formula but also showed the creative rut they’d fall into with diminishing returns in the 1970s.

A journey of terror and delightful horrors. 

Terence Fisher’s direction is the true guiding hand of the film, shaping its gothic mood with a master’s precision. Working in tandem with Michael Reed’s cinematography, Fisher uses the rich Technicolor palette to saturate the sets in deep reds, bruised purples, and eerie blues, heightening the sense of otherworldly menace. His instinct for contrast is striking; the snowy exteriors, seemingly pure and liberating, clash with the suffocating interiors of Castle Dracula to trap both characters and audience alike. This interplay of light and dark, innocence and corruption, is pure Fisher, turning what might have been a routine sequel into a work of gothic operatics. Reed’s lens certainly provides the colour and framing, but it is Fisher’s eye for atmosphere and pacing that elevates the film far above its limited budget, cementing his reputation as Hammer’s definitive stylist.

Michael Reed’s use of colour is spectacular.

It’s fair to say that Lee’s Dracula in the 1958 film wasn’t exactly chatty, but in Prince of Darkness, he doesn’t speak a single word. Lee later explained: “I didn’t speak in that picture. The reason was very simple. I read the script and saw the dialogue! I said to Hammer, ‘If you think I’m going to say any of these lines, you’re very much mistaken.’” Screenwriter Jimmy Sangster denies this, claiming he wrote no dialogue for Dracula, but whether or not it was Lee’s stubbornness or Sangster’s script decision, the result is effective; Dracula becomes an almost purely physical presence, a silent predator whose menace lies in his gaze, hiss, and sudden bursts of violence. He becomes less a man and more a force of nature.

It’s Hammer at its most primal—the Count as pure terror.

In conclusion, Dracula: Prince of Darkness is a flawed but essential Hammer entry, anchored by Christopher Lee’s looming presence and Barbara Shelley’s unforgettable performance. Its structure is formulaic, and the lack of dialogue for Dracula might frustrate some, yet the film succeeds through its atmosphere, Reed’s lush cinematography, and moments of unforgettable Gothic horror. While not as groundbreaking as Horror of Dracula, it remains one of Hammer’s most iconic sequels, proving that sometimes silence can be deadlier than words.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

The Brides of Dracula (1960) – Review

Hammer’s The Brides of Dracula is a curious beast. It’s a direct sequel to 1958’s Dracula, yet it lacks the very thing the title promises: Dracula himself. What it does have is Peter Cushing returning as Van Helsing, and that alone keeps the film afloat, even as Hammer serves us a Dracula substitute with a suspiciously youthful glow.

The movie opens with French schoolteacher Marianne Danielle (Yvonne Monlaur) setting out for a new job in Transylvania—always a promising career move—but promptly gets ditched by her coach driver at a creepy inn. Enter the regal but shifty Baroness Meinster (Martita Hunt), who offers Marianne a bed at her castle. The catch? The Baroness keeps her son, Baron Meinster (David Peel), locked up like the family embarrassment. Naturally, Marianne can’t resist sneaking in, only to find a handsome young man chained to the wall. He pleads for help, claiming his mother has stolen his lands, and Marianne obliges by swiping the key and freeing him.

 

Mistake number one.

Baron Meinster wastes no time showing his gratitude by killing his mother and drinking her blood—because nothing says “thanks, Mom” like matricide with fangs. Marianne bolts in terror, while Greta (Freda Jackson), the world’s most unhinged servant, blames the Baroness for letting her boy fall in with Dracula in the first place. Loyal to a fault, Greta clings to her murderous master like a deranged nanny, cheering him on as he starts thinning out the local talent pool of village girls, turning this corner of Transylvania into one very messy family soap opera.

 

Dysfunction doesn’t get more gothic than this.

After fleeing the castle, Marianne stumbled across Doctor Van Helsing (Peter Cushing), who politely escorted her to her teaching post. Van Helsing, however, is here on business, namely, the dead villagers popping up with suspicious neck wounds. Partnering with Father Stepnik (Fred Johnson), he tries to stop the spread of vampirism, but soon learns Meinster has set his sights on Marianne and turned her jealous roommate, Gina (Andrée Melly), into one of his undead brides.

 

School life just got complicated.

Things come to a head at an abandoned mill, where Meinster and his growing harem are hiding out. Van Helsing fights off the brides, loses his cross to Greta (who then meets gravity in the worst way possible), and even gets bitten by the Baron himself. But Van Helsing is made of sterner stuff: he literally cauterizes his own neck wound and baptizes it with holy water. In the fiery finale, he rescues Marianne, douses Meinster with holy water, and ingeniously turns the mill’s sails into a giant cross, reducing the would-be Dracula replacement to dust. Moral of the story: don’t underestimate Peter Cushing with access to farm equipment.

 

Peter Cushing never chokes in the end.

Stray Observation:

• Marianne is not so much naive as she is rock stupid. After escaping the house, where her last image was of a cackling mad housekeeper and the dead Countess, she agrees to marry the Baron as if nothing had ever happened.
• Van Helsing is pretty inept in this outing. He only ever brings one cross with him, which he constantly loses, and this is not helped by the fact that he’s always bloody late to stop a rising vampire.
• Van Helsing stakes the vampire turned Countess about two inches below where his heart would be. Did he skip that day of biology lessons where the location of the heart was taught?
• Greta deserves a medal for Most Loyal Minion. She protects Meinster, cheers on baby vampires, and finally swan-dives off a railing for her troubles.
• Van Helsing burning and dousing his own bite wound is peak Hammer horror—equal parts gruesome and badass.
• During the final confrontation, the Baron has two vampiric brides, but they do absolutely nothing to aid their master in fighting Van Helsing.

 

He should have left them at the altar.

As sequels go, The Brides of Dracula is both ambitious and faintly ridiculous. Terence Fisher doubles down on gothic mood—fog, crypts, and Technicolor gore—Asher’s lush visuals, and one unforgettable windmill showdown, the film proves that Hammer could still deliver the thrills, even if Dracula himself was conspicuously absent. This is the film’s key problem. No Christopher Lee. Instead, Hammer hands us Baron Meinster, a Dracula understudy who looks like he should be modelling knitwear rather than commanding legions of the undead. He’s fine as a villain, but the menace just isn’t there. You don’t tremble when he shows up; you half expect him to ask where the nearest spa is.

 

“Do you like my cape?”

What Hammer did get right was bringing back Peter Cushing. As Van Helsing, he’s still the gold standard of vampire hunters; calm, clinical, and willing to sear his own jugular with a hot poker if the job requires it. Around him, the cast does what’s needed: Yvonne Monlaur is sweet but mostly a damsel on the run, Martita Hunt adds tragic weight as the doomed Baroness, and Freda Jackson gleefully chews through every scene as Greta, who might actually be scarier than the Baron himself. And through it all, Jack Asher’s cinematography makes the film glow with the rich, painterly style that was Hammer’s secret weapon. The film may be missing Dracula, but it still looks like a Hammer classic; it’s lavish, lurid, and just theatrical enough to work. And, of course, the great Peter Cushing helps carry things.

 

Have Cross – Will Travel.

In the end, The Brides of Dracula is Hammer trying to sell you Pepsi when you ordered Coke. No Christopher Lee, no Dracula, just a pretty-boy knockoff with fangs. But thanks to Terence Fisher’s gothic flair, Jack Asher’s velvet-and-fog visuals, and Peter Cushing proving once again that Van Helsing is the coolest teacher you’ll never have, the film still delivers. It may not have the bite of its predecessor, but as vampire sequels go, it’s classy, creepy, and just unhinged enough to remind you why Hammer ruled the coffin for so long.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Dracula (1958) – Review

Forget the cobwebs and stagey theatrics of old, Hammer’s Dracula kicks down the crypt door with blood-red Technicolor, erotic menace, and two titans of horror: Christopher Lee as the most dangerous Count yet, and Peter Cushing as the steely Van Helsing determined to stop him. This was the film that made Dracula frightening—and sexy—again.

Set in 1885, the story finds Jonathan Harker (John Van Eyssen) arriving at the castle of Count Dracula (Christopher Lee), supposedly to take up the cushy post of librarian. Almost immediately, he stumbles on a panicked young woman (Valerie Gaunt) begging for rescue, which is never a good sign when you’re checking into someone’s house. Dracula himself soon appears—icy politeness wrapped in aristocratic menace—and escorts Harker to his room. But Harker’s diary spills the beans: he’s not here to alphabetize books, he’s here to kill the Count.

 

Beware, this is not your typical damsel in distress.

Naturally, things go sideways. The “imprisoned” woman is actually a vampire who sinks her teeth into him before Dracula storms in like a jealous landlord. Harker wakes up with fang marks and realizes he’s lost an entire day; either vampires are really efficient, or Hammer was on a tight shooting schedule. Determined to finish the job, he heads for the crypt, stakes the vampire woman in a scene that doubles as an advert for wrinkle cream, then finds Dracula’s coffin conveniently empty. Cue the sound of the crypt door slamming shut.

 

Who didn’t see this coming?

Enter Dr. Van Helsing (Peter Cushing), Harker’s colleague and all-around professional vampire exterminator. He arrives in Klausenburg to find the locals terrified and unhelpful, except for the innkeeper’s daughter, who slips him Harker’s journal like contraband. At the castle, Van Helsing finds it deserted, save for a missing portrait of Lucy Holmwood (Carol Marsh), Harker’s fiancée. In the crypt, he discovers Harker himself has joined the ranks of the undead and stakes him, not without regret. He then breaks the bad news to Lucy’s brother Arthur (Michael Gough) and his wife Mina (Melissa Stribling). Arthur, like every stubborn brother-in-law in horror history, scoffs at the whole thing, that is, until Lucy starts sleepwalking into Dracula’s embrace. Soon, she’s stalking graveyards and children, until Van Helsing and Arthur catch her in the act.

 

This is just what the doctor ordered.

Van Helsing stakes her in a grim mercy killing, and Arthur finally admits maybe, just maybe, this Van Helsing fellow knows what he’s talking about. Unfortunately, Mina now becomes Dracula’s target, and before long, she’s lured away for the Count’s “undead bride” package deal. The climax sees Van Helsing and Arthur racing to the castle, where Cushing hurls himself around like an action hero, ripping down curtains to unleash the sunlight and forming a cross out of candlesticks like he’s auditioning for MacGyver. Dracula is reduced to dust and wardrobe accessories, Mina is freed from his thrall, and Hammer Films plants its flag as the new lords of gothic horror.

 

Good triumphs!

Stray Observations:

• When it’s staking time, Jonathan Harker goes for Dracula’s bride first instead of the big guy himself. Bold strategy, like swatting a mosquito before tackling the bear that owns the forest.
• Christopher Lee has a mere 13 lines of dialogue in the entire film, but his towering presence more than compensates.
• Michael Gough, who plays Arthur Holmwood, would later gain fame as Alfred in Tim Burton’s Batman, and he also appeared in Burton’s adaptation of Sleepy Hollow, which also features Christopher Lee.
• Dracula’s coffin in the undertaker’s cellar sports a big honking cross on the lid. Which raises the question, “How exactly did he get inside?” Last I checked, “touching holy symbols” wasn’t on Dracula’s list of hobbies.
• Arthur gallantly donates blood to Mina via transfusion. Charming, yes, but in 1885, this was basically medical roulette. Blood types wouldn’t be sorted out until 1901, so Van Helsing might as well have been pouring Merlot into her veins.

 

Great vampire hunter, but as a doctor…not so much.

Retitled Horror of Dracula for U.S. release, it is the film that changed Gothic horror forever. Directed by Terence Fisher, shot in vivid colour by Jack Asher, and anchored by the powerhouse duo of Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing, it marked Hammer Films’ rise as the new leaders of cinematic horror. While not a strict retelling of Bram Stoker’s novel, it distilled the story into something visceral, bloody, and shockingly sensual for its time. This wasn’t your grandfather’s Dracula; it was leaner, faster, and far more dangerous. Hammer’s Dracula diverges significantly from Bram Stoker’s novel, boiling the story down to its essence. Gone are Renfield, Carfax Abbey, and much of the novel’s sprawling travelogue structure. Instead, Jimmy Sangster’s script gives us a tight, small-scale story centred on the conflict between Dracula and Van Helsing. This paring down amplifies the pace and intensity, but it also means Dracula himself is less the shadowy, scheming aristocrat of Stoker and more an elemental force of lust and violence.

 

A very feral lust, I must say.

Compared to Universal’s 1931 Dracula, where Bela Lugosi portrayed the Count as a hypnotic, theatrical figure steeped in Old World charm, Lee’s version is all physicality. He erupts from the shadows, eyes blazing red, mouth dripping with blood, and if Lugosi’s Dracula seduced through his aristocratic mystery, Lee seduced (and terrified) with raw animal magnetism. The difference is night and day: Universal’s film feels like stage-bound gothic theatre, Hammer’s like a fever dream painted in lurid technicolor. This was also the film that cemented Hammer’s place as the new kings of horror. Jack Asher’s cinematography gave the gothic world a bold, painterly look, deep shadows broken by saturated colour; candlelit corridors contrasted with bursts of scarlet blood.

 

The look alone separated Hammer from its predecessors. 

At the centre, of course, are Lee and Cushing. Christopher Lee’s Dracula is often hailed as one of the greatest interpretations of the character: terrifying yet magnetic, aristocratic yet feral. His Dracula is a monster that doesn’t just stalk prey but erupts upon it. Meanwhile, Peter Cushing’s Van Helsing is arguably definitive, the opposite of Lugosi’s Dracula in every way: precise, restrained, intellectual, yet unyielding. Their final battle is one of the most thrilling sequences in Gothic horror, a clash of wills staged with fiery conviction.

 

Truly, a great dynamic duo.

Hammer’s Dracula isn’t just a remake or an adaptation, it’s a reinvention. By stripping away the novel’s excesses and Universal’s staginess, Fisher, Lee, and Cushing created a Dracula that was frightening, sensual, and utterly alive. It kickstarted Hammer’s golden age, inspired countless imitators, and redefined what cinematic horror could look and feel like. Over sixty years later, its blood still runs hot.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Trucks (1997) – Review

When Stephen King first took a crack at bringing his killer truck story to the screen, he already proved this idea could crash and burn in spectacular fashion. Apparently, that wasn’t warning enough. Because 1997’s Trucks rolls in anyway, stretching, mangling, and flattening the premise into a wheezing made-for-TV relic that somehow makes one wonder if the vehicles should’ve just finished the job and run the script over completely.

Stephen King’s Trucks was first adapted into the cocaine-and-AC/DC-fueled chaos of Maximum Overdrive back in 1986, which, for all its screaming insanity and exploding soda machines, at least had a camp energy that made it unforgettable. Fast forward to 1997, and the USA Network decided the world needed a more “faithful” adaptation. Unfortunately, “faithful” doesn’t always mean “better.” In fact, Trucks proves that sticking closer to the source can turn a wild concept into a slow, joyless slog.

 

“Son, this will not be a Field of Dreams.”

We’re in Lunar, Nevada, a dusty speck of a town that survives on two things: its nearby military base (shh, don’t say Area 51 too loud) and alien-themed folklore. But forget flying saucers—Lunar gets invaded by Peterbilts. It starts small: a guy named Phil (Harry Nelkin) gets flattened when a semi crashes into his house while he’s taking a shower. Take that, Hitchcock. Then a frozen meat truck eats its own driver, because…irony? Meanwhile, Hope (Brenda Bakke), who runs a hiking-and-tourism gig, is guiding some out-of-towners—Jack (Jay Brazeau), Thad (Roman Podhora), and his daughter Abby (Amy Stewart)—when they stumble onto Phil’s truck blocking the road, and have to then dodge the meat truck, followed by the discovery of Phil’s lacerated corpse.

 

Welcome to Lunar, folks.

Naturally, she calls in local gas station owner Ray (Timothy Busfield), an overprotective dad and his teenage son Logan (Brendan Fletcher), who immediately get nearly sideswiped by a rogue yellow truck, and before you can say “Stephen King,” the group is holed up at the diner/gas station/cabin combo while trucks circle the lot like lazy sharks. A semi tries to bury Abby and Logan alive under a drainage pipe like it’s starring in a very slow-motion Saw trap. Rednecks show up, one blows himself up with Molotov cocktails, and everyone spends way too much time debating how to sneak past parked trucks. We even get a HAZMAT suit that inflates itself and goes full Halloween on two poor workers.

Note: While this film stays more in keeping with the short story, with it being only trucks that come alive, the scene with the HAZMAT suit is goofier than anything we saw in Maximum Overdrive.

The machines, meanwhile, play the long game—keeping Ray alive since he’s the only guy around who can pump their gas. There’s some sneaking, some failed escapes, a few more pancake victims, and eventually, Ray manages to blow up the diner with one of the lead rigs inside. Problem solved? Not quite. By morning, he, Hope, and Logan are still being chased by a charred truck until a helicopter swoops in to rescue them. Hooray! Except… surprise—no one’s flying it. The movie ends with the chopper tilting into the sky while everyone looks horrified, because apparently Trucks wanted one last twist of “what the hell?” before the credits rolled.

 

That’s sort of an ending, I guess.

Stray Observations:

• Ray brought his son south after his wife was killed during a drive-by in Detroit, to keep him safe from guns and gangs. But isn’t the “South” known for its guns and rednecks? Is that much better?
• The power is knocked out by a truck, and we get some vague explanation as to why the phones and radio don’t work, but the television occasionally turns out to provide plot developments.
• Trucks was directed by Chris Thomson, who mostly worked in television. You can tell—this thing has all the visual flair of a rerun of Highway to Heaven, just with more tire tracks on people’s faces.
• Unlike Maximum Overdrive, which at least gave us that insane “lawnmower vs. Little League team” moment, Trucks is PG-level tame.
• A mailman is mercilessly bludgeoned to death by a toy Tonka truck, and I will give the movie bonus points for that.

 

Is that gore or strawberry jam?

On paper, Trucks actually does follow King’s short story more closely. The setting is smaller, the tone more serious, and there’s even an attempt to tap into the hopelessness of humanity being outmatched by their own machines. The problem is, the film has the energy of a stalled engine. Where Maximum Overdrive gave us campy gore and AC/DC blasting in the background, Trucks gives us long stretches of people sitting around in a diner arguing about what to do next, while the trucks—wait for it—drive in circles.

 

This film feels like it’s stuck in neutral.

It’s almost impressive how a movie with killer vehicles can feel so lethargic. Even the big “attack” sequences are clunky. One guy gets pancaked by a pickup in broad daylight while staring at it for about twenty seconds too long. Another person gets mowed down because apparently nobody in this universe understands the concept of stepping to the side. The supposed climax involves the survivors trying to sneak past the trucks in the middle of the night, which sounds thrilling until you actually watch it. And even though the body count is technically higher than King’s short story, every single death feels about as exciting as watching someone lose at Frogger. Compared to Maximum Overdrive—with its exploding gas station, deadly vending machines, and lawnmower Little League carnage—this tally is about as bloodless and bland as TV movies come.

 

Fifty percent of this film is just people staring out windows.

As for the performances, Timothy Busfield’s Ray is technically the “hero,” but he spends most of the movie looking like he wandered into the wrong production while waiting for a West Wing callback. Brenda Bakke’s Hope tries to inject some toughness into the proceedings, but she’s mostly relegated to shouting lines like “We have to get out of here!” Brendan Fletcher and Amy Stewart do their part as teenagers who alternate between sulking and shrieking. The real stars, of course, are the trucks. Unfortunately, they don’t exactly have the charisma of the homicidal Happy Toyz truck from Maximum Overdrive. They just kind of roll forward, stop, roll back, and repeat. Imagine trying to feel terror while watching a traffic jam, and you’ve got the vibe.

 

This film could definitely have used a Green Goblin truck.

At the end of the day, Trucks is that rare beast: a movie that’s more faithful to Stephen King’s story than its infamous predecessor, yet somehow manages to be less fun, less scary, and infinitely more forgettable. Where Maximum Overdrive was a loud, dumb, glorious mess, Trucks is a quiet, dull, joyless one—so committed to being “serious” that it squeezes out every drop of entertainment. It doesn’t even have the decency to go off the rails; it just sputters along until it runs out of gas.