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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.cso.uiuc.edu!uxa.cso.uiuc.edu!tgt33358
- From: tgt33358@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (Thanatos)
- Subject: Re: Bram Stoker's Dracula
- References: <1992Nov16.063136.16345@rose.com>
- Message-ID: <Bxt06r.vv@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.cso.uiuc.edu (Net Noise owner)
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 10:08:50 GMT
- Lines: 78
-
- In article <1992Nov16.063136.16345@rose.com> david.vaughan@rose.com (david vaughan) writes:
- >
- >*** I have tried to avoid spoilers, but there may be some
- >*** which slipped in inadvertently. Read at own risk.
- Me too!
-
- >
- >
- >
- >
- >
- >
- >
- >The fact is, even the historical Vlad Tepes was a very unpleasant,
- >thoroughly nasty character, and I have always felt that any
- >'humanization' of Dracula would still have to account for the fact
- >that he was based on one of history's most notorious tyrants.
- >Ultimately, in the novel, Dracula functioned not so much as a
- >character as a force of darkness whose lusts and schemes permeated
- >every page, even though he was offstage most of the time. While I like
- >the idea of putting more character into Dracula, I don't think there
- >is really room for turning him 180 degrees into a reluctant,
- >self-pitying vampire like Louis au Pointe du Lac, something that
- >threatened to happen several times (he actually resisted putting the
- >bite on Mina, and tried to talk her out of accepting his blood). I
- >would picture Dracula as somewhat wornout after 400 years of undeath,
- >but determined to use his move to England as a chance to renew his
- >lust for life. Furthermore, while he may be world-weary, he is still
- >Vlad the Impaler, a powerful warlord, who is more than willing to take
- >what he wants, destroying physically or spiritually those who get in
- >his way.
- Well, my take on it was that Vlad Tepes as the movie presented him was a
- warlord fighting off a brutal Turk advance, and performed the original
- impalings as an act of war. When his wife died, and he became a vampire,
- his bloodthirsty actions rendered him into the Dracula we know. Thus his
- inhumane acts will be resolved the moment he gains back that which
- twisted him in the first place (the death of his wife).
- What _I_ didn't like was the ending. The ending of the book was
- IMHO perfect. Van Helsing explains (offstage) that Dracula is an honorable and
- noble creature. If they beat him in two places (London and Transylvania), then
- he would end the hunt then and there. Notice how violently Lucy dies. Then
- notice how violently (or lack thereof) Dracula dies (both in the novel).
- I don't think Dracula was dead at the end of the novel, merely defeated.
- The "My love will make everything okay" came out of NOWHERE! No Gothic
- foreshadowing, no real denoument. It was there and it was gone. However,
- you could not have finished the movie as you finished the book, since
- essentially Mina was a VERY weak character, and that just doesn't cout it
- in the 90's.
-
- >
- >In summary, then, I felt that Bram Stoker's Dracula is probably as
- >good a film version of the novel as we are likely to see. While the
- >characterizations were not always faithful, the gothic atmosphere was
- >very well done, and it was a pleasure to see the basic plot of the
- >novel on the big screen along with many scenes that just never seemed
- >to make into the other versions. It is my sincere hope that Hollywood
- >will now let the old beast rest, and start putting some original
- >pieces and adaptations of modern vampire classics (eg. Rice's
- >Chronicles and Collins' Sunglasses After Dark) on the screen.
- >Unfortunately, if this one makes money, the industry is likely to opt
- >for more of the same.
- >
- >David Vaughan
- >Hamilton, Ont., Canada
- >david.vaughan@rose.com
- >---
- > RR 1.60 P002365: I never drink ... wine. -- Dracula
- >
- >---
- > RR 1.60 P002365: I never drink ... wine. -- Dracula
- > RoseMail 2.00 : Usenet: Rose Media - Hamilton (416) 575-5363
-
-
- --
- I don't mind being the smartest / Thanatos, DeathUrge, Master of Unknown
- man in the world...I just wish it \ Time and Space tgt33358@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu
- wasn't this one... / It's a Zen thing...
- -Ozymandias \ you wouldn't understand...
-