"The next Superb ¼ scale statue from Star Ace features Christopher Lee as he appeared in the 1970 film "Scars of Dracula." Christopher Lee fixed the image of the fanged vampire in popular culture and ...
Sam is a Senior Writer for Collider. His love for movies, TV shows, and books stretches back to his early childhood and has grown exponentially with every passing year. Lucky for him, this love grew ...
Christopher Lee, the second most famous Dracula of the 20th century — an impressive feat — and a memorably irrepressible villain in James Bond film “The Man With the Golden Gun,” in the “Star Wars” ...
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67 years later, Christopher Lee’s most dangerous Dracula has aged better than any other version
Before 1958, Dracula was synonymous with the legendary Bela Lugosi, whose theatrical and mesmerizing performance shrouded the character in shadow and mystery. Years later, when Christopher Lee first ...
(The announcement of Lee’s death from respiratory problems and heart failure was delayed by his wife until family could be notified.) Lee played Dracula nine times, mostly for the British horror ...
Ten years after The Brides of Dracula proved Hammer Horror could make a Dracula movie without the iconic bloodsucker himself, the legendary studio held up a crucifix to their star attraction once more ...
Screen legends Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee helped to pave the way for horror. Each of them brought a special presence to the screen, whether it was their towering height and menacing voice, or ...
Now that we’re positively swimming in adaptations of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, it’s easy to forget just how much of our cultural understanding of the character was built around one actor for decades.
Sir Christopher Lee returned to portray the charismatic count of Transylvania in Hammer’s Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966) for the first time since taking on the iconic role in 1958’s Horror of ...
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