When I reviewed the 1960 PSYCHO, I did so with the
knowledge that it had been so exhaustively critiqued that it was difficult to
say something new. For that reason I drew comparisons between the film and its
somewhat neglected Robert Bloch source-novel. Film critics haven’t written
nearly as much about the 1931 DRACULA. But as it’s a classic film and the
forerunner of the first horror-craze of the sound era, DRACULA is still pretty
well-worn territory.
I’ll again touch on some of the divergences between
a film and its source-novel, but only on a few assorted points, particularly
since the screenplay reputedly owes less to the novel than to the novel’s
stage-adaptation. Still, I think it’s interesting to look at some of the
differences as “roads not taken.”
There’s little to say about the film inability to duplicate the novel’s wild supernatural effects. Director Tod
Browning had the same considerations as stage productions of the novel:
budgetary considerations. Cinematic contrivances did allow Browning and
cinematographer Karl Freund (allegedly an associate director in all but name)
to give viewers a magnificent illusion of Dracula’s castle, far beyond the
resources of theatrical productions. But a major portion of the action takes place
in the stagy-looking drawing-room of a manor that doubles as Doctor Seward’s
sanatorium, and the one impressive visual seen in Carfax British abbey at the
climax doesn’t eradicate the preceding visual tedium.
There are things, though, that a movie could have done as
well as a book; things that the DRACULA screenplay didn’t bother to address.
The Stoker novel gains great mythic power from picturing modern Transylvania as
a wasteland drained by a tyrant who’s been alive for centuries, and who only in
1898 has decided to move on to fresh killing-grounds. Perhaps the Universal
film couldn’t give a panoramic view of a whole country. Still, the script could
have given more attention to Dracula’s personal history, not least giving him a
stronger motive for moving all the way to England. It’s even ambiguous about
how long Dracula’s been undead. He makes reference to the “broken battlements”
of his land and speaks of the glory of being truly dead. Yet there’s no reference, when the vampire is staked off-camera, to his body's turning to dust (which later becomes
a plot-point in DRACULA’S DAUGHTER). Only Bela Lugosi’s superlative performance
really sells the image of the Count as the relic of a bygone aristocratic era. This image comes across during the scenes at Castle Dracula, though there’s a similar vibe when he takes as
his first victim in London-- a poor flower-seller, before moving on to the higher
social strata.
If the character of this Dracula is not as rich
as Stoker’s creation, the character of Renfield certainly profits from the changes of the 1931
film. In the novel, he’s just an insane fellow in Seward’s nuthouse. Dracula uses Renfield as a pawn until the demented man becomes fascinated with Mina and betrays
his master. Film-Renfield is far more memorable, changing from a slightly
stuffy solicitor to a debased mirror image of his master: his passion for
devouring insects stemming from an "Imitatio Diaboli." His doglike devotion to
Mina isn’t as well developed as it is in the novel, and he doesn’t get a scene
in which he’s in any way tempted by the attentions of Dracula’s wives. Still,
Frye’s performance as the vampire’s slave may define Renfield even more than
Lugosi defines Dracula.
In contrast, though, Stoker’s resourceful Jonathan
Harker becomes a thoroughly meat-headed swain who’s something of a headache for
vampire hunter Van Hesling. Edward Van Sloan provides a fine methodical
vampire-hunter, though over the years Van Helsing has proven elastic enough to
allow for a variety of re-interpretations.
Central to the novel’s structure is the “bad girl/
good girl” dichotomy that many critics consider innate to the culture of
Victorian England. The movie makes Mina Murray, who in the book is the friend
of the more upper-class Lucy Westenra, the daughter of Doctor Seward. The movie
does keep the idea that Dracula goes for Lucy, the “easy get,” before going on
to Mina, the “hard get.” This Lucy, though, isn't noticeably upper-class and doesn’t have three men courting her, and
the only thing that makes her a little “bad” is that she shows an ardent
fascination with Count Dracula even before he starts talking about his “broken
battlements. ” In contrast we have “good
girl” Mina, who’s securely engaged to the dishrag Harker, which seems to be all that's especially "good" about her. The script mangles the story-potential
of Lucy’s vampirization, possibly eliding any conclusion to her plot-line-- which is particularly grisly in the book-- to
avoid alienating the audiences of 1931. As for Mina, she lacks the heroic, yet
still feminine, dimensions of Stoker’s creation. Only in one sequence does she
consciously resist the influence of Dracula after having been forced to drink his
blood and become a “pre-vampire.” Helen
Chandler’s best moment with the character occurs when she begins displaying the
predatory nature seen in Dracula’s wives. But this scene remains a tease, so
that some other actress got the honor of acting out the first female-on-male
fanging of cinema’s sound era.
The vampire-mythology of Browning is nowhere near as
well developed as Stoker’s, but again, it must be admitted that a book has much
more space in which develop such matters. Yet it’s arguable that the movie
DRACULA had a far more transformative effect on American cinema than Stoker’s
novel did on British fantasy-fiction. There were several novels in the 1800s
that might equal DRACULA in terms of developing fantastic concepts. But in
American silent films, it was a rare thing to see full-blown fantasy-concepts
developed to their utmost, with occasional exceptions like the 1924 THIEF OFBAGDAD and the 1929 MYSTERIOUS ISLAND. Films in the horror subgenre tended
toward the uncanny form of the Gothic, with stories like THE CAT AND THE
CANARY. But Stoker’s freewheeling synthesis of vampire legends hearkened back
to works of marvelous horror like VATHEK and THE MONK, to say nothing of
working in a probable parody of Christian lore.
The film’s script is talky, but this has the
advantage of laying out the mythology of vampires in a way that a silent film
could not. The Count seems positively Satanic as he battles with Van Helsing
over the soul of Mina, imparting a mythic vibe to a phrase like, “I shall see
that she dies—by night!” He doesn’t succeed, partly due to Renfield’s
betrayals. The final scene in Carfax Abbey manages to put across this vibe too,
despite Browing’s clumsy mounting. We see Van Helsing and Harker penetrate the
abbey, where they find Dracula inert in his coffin. Then Van Helsing
kinda-sorta opens another coffin, in which he seems to anticipate finding
Mina—though for some reason he doesn’t really look into the coffin. Then
there’s a cut to show Mina still alive, off to the corner—and only then does
the professor look again, and find the second coffin empty. I would guess that
this bit of business is another inheritance from the stage-adaptation,
but though it’s far from riveting, it did make me wonder if the scene might
have been derived from the Gospel story in which Christ’s followers visit his
sepulcher and find it empty. Such a reworking—which resembles nothing in the
novel-- compares favorably with Stoker’s recasting of other Christian
motifs, even if the film’s Mina is no heroic sufferer; merely a prize to be
protected by her future husband and his elderly preceptor. I imagine that
Browning was aware of some of these aspects of the original, but I don’t get a
sense that they signified anything but aspects of a job he’d been assigned.
That said, DRACULA remains a major game-changer in
American cinema. If it had not been made at that particular time—if, say,
FRANKENSTEIN, also a popular stage-play, had gotten there first—the game still
would have been changed. Still, of the two the vampire-lord has deeper roots in
myth and folklore, and so for that reason I’m glad that DRACULA was the first
“marvelous Gothic” out of the gate. Bela Lugosi never got another role nearly
as crucial as this one, and he certainly had reason to regret being typed as a
horror-actor. Still, since he’d been largely doing a lot of exotics and
functionary-types before DRACULA, he could have faced a worse fate for an
actor: that of total obscurity. Becoming an icon doesn’t always make you rich,
but it does provide one with a curious kind of “life after death.”