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Certification12 Our Rating

A trio of tales told portmanteau style with Boris Karloff as your host; find out more...

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. find out more...

Certification18 Our Rating

Coppola's superbly over-the-top adaptation of Stoker's gothic classic. Oldman is truly chilling as the dark lord, and the supporting cast, especially Hopkins, are admirable. The effects are breathtaking, and Reeves and Ryder provide the humour with their laughable English accents! Brilliant. find out more...

Certification15 Our Rating

7.16 - 'Storyteller'; Andrew bizarrely turns into the old dude in the armchair who tells magical tales. This is the funniest episode in the series. find out more...

Certification15 Our Rating

Master swordsman Kronos finds himself in a village where the local young women have had their youth drained from them by a vampire's kiss. A great slash and stab of old style cult British horror. find out more...

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. find out more...

Certification12 Our Rating

Stephen Sommers gives us something for our eyes to feast on, if lacking some of the charm of his earlier efforts ('The Mummy' franchise, all of which he wrote and directed). The Dracula story has had quite a few outings in the cinema, and this is definitely one of the weaker ones. The eponymous hero is of course the infamous Monster killer, played in earlier (more innocent) days by Peter Cushing who was armed only with a wooden tent peg with which to destroy Christopher Lee. This time around, th find out more...