
You'll laugh until you die...then you'll rise from the dead and laugh again!
When a lawyer shows up at the vampire's doorstep, he falls prey to his charms and joins him in his search for fresh blood. Enter Professor Van Helsing, who may be the only one able to vanquish the Count.
- 6.1
- 1995
- Released
- 1h 28m

Leslie Nielsen
Count Dracula
Mel Brooks
Prof. Abraham Van Helsing
Amy Yasbeck
Mina Seward
Peter MacNicol
Thomas Renfield
Lysette Anthony
Lucy Westenra
Harvey Korman
Dr. Jack Seward
Steven Weber
Jonathan Harker
Mark Blankfield
Martin
Megan Cavanagh
Essie
Gregg Binkley
Woodbridge
Anne Bancroft
Madame Ouspenskaya
Clive Revill
Sykes
Chuck McCann
Innkeeper
Avery Schreiber
Peasant on Coach
Cherie Franklin
Peasant on Coach
Ezio Greggio
Coach Driver
Leslie Sachs
Usherette
Rudy De Luca
Guard
Darla Haun
Brunette Vampire
Karen Roe
Blonde Vampire
Charlie Callas
Man in Straitjacket
Maud Winchester
Ballroom Guest
Kathleen Kane
Villager
Tony Griffin
Crewman
Cindy Marshall-Day
Young Lover at Picnic
Sandy Johnson
Ballroom Dancer
Sandy Rovetta
Ballroom Dancer

Released
en
$30,000,000.00
$10,772,144.00
- #vampire
- #satire
- #spoof
- #dracula
Reviews

**_Amusing parody of Dracula with Leslie Nielsen, Mel Brooks and Harvey Korman_** “Dracula: Dead and Loving It” (1995) is a Mel Brooks spoof of the Dracula story with the same fun style and goofy humor of “Young Frankenstein” (1974) and “Spaceballs” (1987). Unlike "Love at First Bite" (1979) with George Hamilton, the story doesn’t take place in the modern day, but is basically a silly redo of t

**Nielsen has done better, but this movie is good enough to be enjoyable and mildly funny.** This comedy, starring Leslie Nielsen and intelligently directed by Mel Brooks, is truly good. It is a parody of old horror movies, in which Dracula is an aristocratic undead who lives off the blood of unsuspecting humans. The film is more directly inspired by the old productions of Hammer Studios and Fr
Most probably my least favourite film, both of Mel Brooks (though I haven't seen 'Life Stinks' yet) and of Leslie Nielsen (though I refuse to watch any other of the post-'Airplane' and 'Naked Gun' knockoffs he's made over the years since), but it still doesn't deserve all the hate. It's STILL at least 50,000 times funnier than Lena Dunham's 'Tiny Furniture' (or about 70% of the so-called contempor











