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Read our exclusive author interview It's the summer of 1965, and the streets of...

Moskva
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'Even better than Child 44' Daily Telegraph 'Given that the definitive thriller in 1980's Moscow...

Mr Iyer Goes to War
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An inventive, ambitious interpretation of Don Quixote for our times, Mr Iyer Goes To War is a...
Pathfinder: Dark Waters Rising: Vol. 1
Jim Zub and Andrew Huerta
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The warrior Valeros can rely on his sword arm and his friends, the mysterious sorceress Seoni, qu...

Filth
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With the festive season almost upon him, Detective Sergeant Bruce Robertson is winding down at work...

Wytches: Volume 1
Scott Snyder and Jock
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"It's fabulous. A triumph." -Stephen King "Dark and brutal...Wytches are like nothing horror fans...

Block 46
Johana Gustawsson and Maxim Jakubowski
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Falkenberg, Sweden. The mutilated body of talented young jewellery designer, Linnea Blix, is found...

Paul Bettany recommended Brief Encounter (1945) in Movies (curated)

Awix (3310 KP) rated Count Dracula (1977) in Movies
Nov 15, 2020
Scores very highly for its acting - Frank Finlay is a charismatic Van Helsing and Louis Jourdan a playfully evil Dracula - and also for its atmosphere, even with BBC TV production restraints (videotaped interiors, some rather weird special effects). For an adaptation to stick quite so close to the book is very nearly exceptional, too - Savory makes Lucy and Mina sisters, combines Arthur and Quincey into one character, and cuts down the final act, but that's about it. The drawback to this, of course, is that after the first act Dracula gets relatively little screen-time and even less dialogue, and it does drag on just a tiny bit. Nevertheless, its fidelity and seriousness mean that this is certainly among the top echelon of Draculas in any medium.
