- Dracula Has Risen from the Grave
-
Dracula Has Risen from the Grave Directed by Freddie Francis Produced by Anthony Nelson Keys Written by Anthony Hinds Starring Christopher Lee
Rupert Davies
Veronica Carlson
Barbara EwingMusic by James Bernard Cinematography Arthur Grant Editing by Spencer Reeve Studio Hammer Studios Distributed by Warner Bros.-Seven Arts Release date(s) November 7, 1968 Running time 92 min. Country United Kingdom Language English Dracula Has Risen from the Grave is a 1968 British horror film directed by Freddie Francis for Hammer Films. It stars Christopher Lee as Count Dracula, with support from Rupert Davies, Veronica Carlson, Barry Andrews, Barbara Ewing, Ewan Hooper and Michael Ripper.
Contents
Plot
The film opens in a middle-European village still in the throes of Dracula's reign of terror (see Dracula: Prince of Darkness), where an altar boy discovers the body of a woman stuffed in the church's bell. She is another victim of Dracula, and the village - which Dracula's castle overlooks - is terrified.
A year after Dracula has been destroyed, a Monsignor (Davies) comes to the village on a routine visit only to find the altar boy is now a frightened mute. The villagers refuse to attend Mass at church because "the shadow of his castle touches it". The Priest has apparently lost his faith. To bring to an end the villagers' fears, the Monsignor climbs to the Castle to exorcise it.
The Priest cannot follow him up the mountain and the Monsignor continues alone. As the Monsignor exorcises the castle, attaching a large metal cross to its gate, a storm strikes, and the Priest tries to run, but falls and is knocked out, cutting his head on rock. His blood trickles into a frozen stream; through a crack in the melting ice it trickles on to the lips of the preserved body of Count Dracula and brings it to life.
The Monsignor goes back to the village believing that the Priest had already safely returned, and assures the villagers that the castle is sanctified to protect them from Dracula's evil. He returns to his home city of Kleinenberg.
Unknown to the Monsignor, the Priest is under the control of the resurrected Count. Furious that the cross prevents him from entering his castle, Dracula demands that the enslaved Priest says who is responsible. The Priest leads Dracula in pursuit of the Monsignor and he discovers a new victim for Dracula's revenge - the Monsignor's beautiful niece, Maria (Carlson). First, Dracula bites and enslaves Zena the tavern girl (Ewing). Zena almost succeeds in bringing Maria under Dracula's power, despite her jealousy. However, Maria's boyfriend Paul (Andrews) works in the bakery beneath the tavern, and he rescues her. Dracula punishes the tavern girl for her "failure" by biting and killing her. The Priest is summoned to burn her corpse in the fire of the bakery oven before she turns into a vampire (her teeth have already grown into fangs) and he helps Dracula find Maria. Dracula comes into her bedroom at night over the rooftops. The scene where he bites her is intense and ends with her hand pushing away her china doll.
The Monsignor sees the signs of vampirism in his niece and follows the fleeing figure, but is knocked insensible on the rooftop by the Priest. In his dying state he recruits Paul to help. Paul is an atheist but his love for Maria drives him. Unwittingly he enlists the Priest's help who, unable to break free from Dracula's influence, tries to attack Paul. Paul forces the Priest to lead him to Dracula's lair beyond the tavern bakery. They stake Dracula through the heart; the faithless Priest and the atheist Paul cannot complete the rite and Dracula removes the stake himself. He draws Maria to him on the rooftop, and they are pursued by Paul and the Priest.
Dracula carries Maria to his castle, orders her to remove the metal cross. She tumbles it over the parapet to the ravine below. Paul faces the Count outside the castle and during the struggle Dracula drops over the parapet and lands on his back, impaled on the cross. He fights to free himself, weeping tears of blood, but the Priest recites the Lord's Prayer and Count Dracula perishes, and dissolves into dust. Reunited with Maria and his religion, Paul crosses himself over the spectacle.
Cast
- Christopher Lee (Count Dracula)
- Rupert Davies (Monsignor Ernest Muller)
- Veronica Carlson (Maria Muller)
- Barry Andrews (Paul)
- Barbara Ewing (Zena)
- Ewan Hooper (Priest)
- Marion Mathie (Anna)
- Michael Ripper (Max)
- John D. Collins (Student)
- George A. Cooper (Landlord)
Production
This was the first of the Hammer Dracula films to be shot at Elstree Studios in London. Notably missing are the approach road, coach path and moat seen in front of Castle Dracula in 1958's Dracula and 1966's Dracula: Prince of Darkness. Those films were made at Bray Studios.
The film was photographed by Arthur Grant using colored filters belonging to director Freddie Francis, also a cameraman by trade, who used them when photographing The Innocents (1961). Whenever Dracula (or his castle) is in a scene, the frame edges are tinged crimson, amber and yellow.
Initially Terence Fisher was to direct the film, but dropped out due to illness; Freddie Francis stepped in.
In Australia, the film was the first Hammer Dracula to be passed by the censors; the previous films Dracula (1958) and Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966) were banned. The film was slightly censored and ran for a three-week season at Sydney's Capitol theatre in January 1970.
DVD release
On 6 November, 2007, the film was released as part of a DVD four-pack along with Horror of Dracula, Taste the Blood of Dracula, and Dracula AD 1972.[clarification needed]
External links
- Dracula Has Risen from the Grave at the Internet Movie Database
- Dracula Has Risen from the Grave at AllRovi
- Dracula Has Risen from the Grave at Rotten Tomatoes
- Online Review with gallery
Hammer Dracula films Dracula (1958) • The Brides of Dracula (1960) • Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966) • Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968) • Taste the Blood of Dracula (1970) • Scars of Dracula (1970) • Dracula AD 1972 (1972) • The Satanic Rites of Dracula (1973) • The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires (1974)Dracula Characters of Dracula Other Dracula novels Anno Dracula series (1992–present) • Dracula the Undead (1997) • The Historian (2005) • Bloodline (2005) • Fangland (2007) • Dracula the Un-dead (2009)Stage adaptations Dracula (1924) • Dracula, a Musical Nightmare (1974) • Dracula (1980) • Dracula: The Musical (1982) • Dracula (1995) • Dracula (Czech musical) (1995) • Dracula (1996) • Dracula: A Chamber Musical (1997) • Dracula, the Musical (2004) • Dracula – Entre l'amour et la mort (2006) • Dracula: the Musical (2010)Film adaptations Nosferatu (1922) • Dracula (1931) • Drácula (1931 Spanish version) • Drakula İstanbul'da (1953) • Dracula (1958) • Dracula (1968) • Count Dracula (1970) • Dracula (1973) • Count Dracula (1977) • Dracula (1979) • Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979) • Dracula (1992) • Dracula (2002) • Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary (2002) • Dracula (2006) • Dracula 3D (2012)Other films Comics The Tomb of Dracula • Dracula (Marvel Comics) • Dracula (Dell Comics) • Hellsing • Sword of Dracula • Batman & Dracula: Red RainVideo games The Count (game) • Castlevania series (1986–present) (Dracula (Castlevania)) • Dracula (1986) • Bram Stoker's Dracula (1993) • Dracula Unleashed (1993) • Dracula: Resurrection (1999) • Dracula 2: The Last Sanctuary (2000) • Van Helsing (2004) • Dracula 3: The Path of the Dragon (2008) • Dracula: Origin (2008)Pinball machines Dracula (1979) • Bram Stoker's Dracula (1993)See also Films directed by Freddie Francis 1960s Two and Two Make Six (1962) · The Brain (1962) · Paranoiac (1963) · Nightmare (1964) · The Evil of Frankenstein (1964) · Traitor's Gate (1964) · Dr. Terror's House of Horrors (1965) · Hysteria (1965) · The Skull (1965) · The Psychopath (1966) · The Deadly Bees (1967) · They Came From Beyond Space (1967) · Torture Garden (1967) · Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968)1970s Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny and Girly (1970) · Trog (1970) · The Vampire Happening (1971) · Tales from the Crypt (1972) · The Creeping Flesh (1973) · Tales That Witness Madness (1973) · Son of Dracula (1974) · Craze (1974) · Legend of the Werewolf (1975) · The Ghoul (1975)1980s The Doctor and the Devils (1985) · Dark Tower (1987)Categories:- British films
- English-language films
- 1968 films
- 1960s horror films
- Dracula films
- Hammer Film Productions horror films
- Films directed by Freddie Francis
- Vampires in film and television
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.