Something went wrong
Try again later.
Dracula (2000)
Movie content: When thieves scrambling broke into the mansion was accidentally released the infamous earl, Dracula. Dracula immediately hit the road to New Orleans to find her daughter nemesis - Mary Van Helsing.
4 December 1965, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
27 March 1971, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
11 April 1973, New York City, New York, USA
4 November 1975, Johannesburg, South Africa
15 April 1962, Overland Park, Kansas, USA
1965
22 February 1968, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
28 August 1977, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
13 March 1976, Long Island, New York, USA
August 07, 2008
The use of Craven's name in the title is a cheesy marketing ploy and the secret to the fanged suitor's aversion to all things Christian is an even cheesier hoot.
December 25, 2000
A perfect example of the kind of rigidly conventional vampire movie that wearies contemporary horror buffs.
December 28, 2000
Even true believers will have a hard time sinking their fangs into this thoroughly perfunctory affair.
October 20, 2009
While the result certainly doesn't suck, it does lack any real bite.
January 01, 2011
Too scary, too gory, too gross.
October 28, 2012
It's still a fun bit of "Matrix" lite horror fare...
January 26, 2006
One half-expects a sexually subversive, blood-soaked gay carnival. Instead, Simon makes the effete Dracula (Butler) suck on some abuse.
March 26, 2010
Without a single scare to its credit nor a particularly inspired storyline, this film fails to justify its existence.
June 04, 2001
Dracula may stay undead in the new millennium, but there's not a sign of life -- oh, that bloodless acting -- in this sorry mess.
December 28, 2000
Wilts when compared in the light with other Dracula films.
October 20, 2009
Mary, a descendant of the prototypical vampire slayer, works at a Virgin megastore in New Orleans, and the gratuitous use of the city during Mardi Gras is the least of this movie's unoriginal sins.
February 07, 2014
A fast-paced and captivating exercise in gory action-horror, à la Wesley Snipes's 1998 bloodsucker epic, Blade.

