
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Movie Watch
Archaeologist Indiana Jones is hired by the United States government to locate the mystical Ark of...

Spice and Wolf
TV Show
Holo is a powerful wolf deity who is celebrated and revered in the small town of Pasloe for blessing...
Romance Supernatural

Spice and Wolf: Vol. 12: Manga
Isuna Hasekura and Keito Koume
Book
Lawrence and Holo's long journey to Yoitsu is finally approaching its conclusion. Having arrived in...

The Wolf Man (1941)
Movie
Lawrence "Larry" Talbot returns to his ancestral home in Wales to reconcile with his father. After...
Universal Universal Horror Universal Monsters Lycanthrope Lycanthropy Wolfsbane

Reign Of The Wolf
Book
Day by day, Lydia’s mastery of her storm-wielding grows. But whether gift or curse, her...
Werewolves Urban Fantasy Magic Supernatural Paranormal Romance

Matthew Krueger (10051 KP) rated House of Dracula (1945) in Movies
Jun 18, 2020
The plot: This monster movie focuses on the iconic vampire, Count Dracula (John Carradine), and Lawrence Talbot (Lon Chaney), better known as the Wolf Man. Both beings of the night are tired of their supernatural afflictions, so they seek out Dr. Franz Edelmann (Onslow Stevens) for cures for their respective curses. While trying to aid the imposing creatures, Edelmann himself develops a transformative condition, adding to the many ghouls lurking around the foreboding landscape.
The working titles for the film were Dracula vs. the Wolf Man or The Wolf Man vs. Dracula.
Although Glenn Strange appears as the Monster in most of the film, footage of Chaney as the Monster from The Ghost of Frankenstein and Boris Karloff from Bride of Frankenstein was recycled; Karloff appears in a dream sequence, while Chaney, as well as his double Eddie Parker, are seen in footage in a fire scene.
Strange recounts that a scene with the Monster stuck in quicksand was particularly arduous for him. On top of three hours of getting into makeup, Strange spent the rest of the day buried in cold sand, including during the lunch break, and was so cold by midafternoon that he could barely feel his legs. Lon Chaney Jr. attempted to help Strange keep warm by passing him a bottle of scotch, with the result that Strange was so drunk that after getting out of costume and makeup, he had difficulty dressing himself in his street clothes. Chaney's drinking contributed to his reputation as being difficult to work with, and probably was the reason Universal let him go after the film was completed.
The film, which was the seventh Universal film to feature Frankenstein's monster, as well as the fourth with Count Dracula and the Wolf Man, was a commercial success, but was one of the last Universal movies featuring Frankenstein's monster, vampires, and werewolves, with the exception of the comedy Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948), in which all three appear.
Its a fun entertaing horror film starring the universal monsters.