Dracula,Vlad III.
Vlad III. ( 1431 - 1476 ), for the life known by the patron saint Dracula ( Dragon's son ) and recently by the name of Tepeš ( rum Ţepeş - Nabijač ), was the Vlach prince of the Drăculeşti dynasty and a fighter against the Turks . He ruled Vlaska on three occasions, steadily leading battles with other contenders on the throne, using the extremely cruel methods he learned while he was a hostage of Murata II. . He was trying to maintain good relations with the Christian West and constantly upwardsThe Ottoman Empire, but eventually put it against Sultan Mehmed II. , which cost him a lifetime.
In Romania today is celebrated as a national hero and his cruelty has made him famous throughout Europe. In history, apart from his engagement in the struggles against the Ottoman expansion, he is also known as the inspiration for the vampire count Dracula , the main figure in the novel of Brama Stoker Dracula from 1897 .Lestat who agreed to an interview to tell his reporter about his extraordinary vampire history - Dracula is still the most prominent cop in the media. An icon of horror and horror, created in 1897 by the writer of Brama Stoker, the first association is a pair of toothed canines behind a diabolical red smile. What Edward Cullen ("Twilight Saga"), like copper. Just Dracula. In the current hit "Dracula: Untold Story", more careful eyes in the cinema will observe the statues of Three Wise Apes - Iwazaru covering his mouth so that nothing is said evil, Kikazarus covering his ears and therefore not hearing the evil, and Mizarua covering his eyes and therefore he saw nothing evil.
The statues are perhaps set in the backdrop of a scene to irony the fact that Dracula always says that everyone has heard and looked at at least one movie with him in the main role, from the ancient "Dracula" (1931) Toda Browning to this year's "Dracula Untold" Gary Shore. Dracula is known to you even if you do not know who he was, nor did you hear his "(not) story told". Simply, Dracula's rise from the grave, the eyeballs in the eye of blood, his wrinkled lips and the neck of the neck-necked women, the weakness of silver, the vulnerability to the light, the fear of the cross and the sunlight, the fall of the collar through the heart ... they are the common place of the classic horror straight "Live it!" the crap of a foul doctor in the lab ("Frankenstein").As the appearance of the hundreds of Turks on the podium under Tepeš's ingerence showed Gary Shore in "Dracula Untold," but not nearly as impressive as Francis Ford Coppola in the first minutes of "Dracule" (1992), the highly-valued Akire Kurosawe with battle shadows opposed to bloody sunset . It is estimated that, allegedly, Dracula killed at least 40,000 people, which is the figure that Evans is nearly reaching in the "Unlucky story." "Allegedly" is the key word when Dracula is mentioned. Much of the rumors have never been confirmed, but Stoker has all the above mentioned is inspirational to create a perfect monster and Tepeš after Dracula becomes Dracula.
Later films in horror sense were well informed that when excavating the remains of Vlad in 1931, Bele Lugosija, no coffin was found. The casket from which the fingers with his long nails were filed in the movies before he got up like a gentleman in a suit for the funeral. In some films, Dracula knew he was a sensational and romantic, royal Romeo vampire who crosses the "ocean of time" for love as in Coppola's vision of the Stoker novel, and particularly seductive as an agent 007 with the needy to be given to the ladies but was constantly a villain, classic horror "bad guy", so it's natural, on several occasions, excellent (from) the aristocratic Bond-Christopher Lee ("Man with a Golden Pistol").The primary purpose of the "Unfortunate Stories" is that Stoker's figure gets his own vampire franchise and becomes an action "cooler" (Dracool)? Today's audience in computer-to-video "video" effects overcrowded to pixel-shooting as in the "Underworld" series (2003-2012). ). In that name, the camera will be fired in one action scene together with a gunslinger tensile that hits the trap like a bomb thrown from a plane in Pearl Harbor (2001), and in the second, more creative, fight will be seen in the turquoise which falls to the ground and slowly dies. The action of this type, against which Eastern European photographs are blurred, would have been anticipated in "Blade," but where is that horror? Nowhere, unfortunately.
Terror and horror do not reside in the new "Dracula", perhaps because Evans' lighter age-predicates (PG-13) do not allow them to blend in with a bloody razor such as Oldman, let alone fry the bread in the full red liquor of people lurking on the pile - real "Tepeša that would scare spectators who were raised to" Sumraka ". There is no classic horror scene in which the villagers fear for the life of a character Jonathan Harker ( Keanu Reeves at Coppola) when they drive to the Drakul Castle in the dark. There is not even this character. At least, Dracula's love story got as much-so decent a treat.