Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary

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Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary

Region 1 DVD Cover
Directed by Guy Maddin
Produced by Vonnie Von Helmut
Written by Original Novel:
Bram Stoker
Ballet:
Mark Godden
Starring Zhang Wei-Qiang
Tara Birtwhistle
David Moroni
CindyMarie Small
Johnny Wright
Music by Original by:
Gustav Mahler
Arranged by:
Russ Dyck
Bruce Little
Cinematography Paul Suderman
Editing by Deco Dawson
Release date(s) Canada February 28, 2002
USA May 14, 2003

UK Dec 12, 2003

Running time 75 min.
Country Canada
Language Silent
Budget CAD $1.6 million[1]
Official website
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary is a 2002 horror film directed by Guy Maddin. It is a silent interpretation of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet's take of Bram Stoker's Dracula. It was originally filmed as a telefilm for CBC Television in Canada, but popular critical acclaim brought it to a United States theatrical release. [2]

Contents

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

In 1897, a visitor from the East, Dracula , arrives in London and is inadvertently invited into the home of Lucy. She is bitten by Dracula, and taken by his vampiric curse. Lucy's behavior becomes progressively more erratic which becomes apparent to her three suitors and her house maids when she bites her fiancée. Lucy is immediately put under the care of Dr. Van Helsing. Van Helsing does blood tests on Lucy and eventually declares "Vampyre!" as the source of the problem, and puts Lucy to bed adorned with garlic.

Lucy being visited by Dracula
Lucy being visited by Dracula

That very night, Renfield, a mental patient who lives in the asylum next to Lucy's home, escapes from confinement. This leads to Lucy's house being broken into by demons in the night. Woken the commotion, Lucy's mother rises from her bed to stop them. Panicked by the demons, she opens the door and inadvertently re-invites Dracula into the house. Both Lucy and her mother are killed in this incident and a funeral procession takes place. The next day, Renfield is recaptured and placed back into the mental hospital. Bizarre incidents begin to occur around the city and are reported in newspapers. Headlines speak of a supposed "Bloofer Lady" who has been murdering infants. Renfield is interrogated and confesses that Dracula has brought Lucy back from the dead. It is she committing these deeds and the solution to the problem lies in the graveyard. Van Helsing and Lucy's suitors go there on foot and spy Dracula and the undead Lucy in a full romantic embrace. Dracula eventually settles Lucy back into her coffin and vanishes. Van Helsing declares "We must destroy the false Lucy so the real one may live forever"; however, when Van Helsing opens the coffin Lucy rises out of and attacks the men. Lucy is eventually subdued by a piercing stab from Jonathan via long wooden stakes the man are carrying. This forces Lucy back into her coffin where she is decapitated with a shovel by Van Helsing. Van Helsing declares they must find and defeat the Vampyre.

Van Helsing and his men go to Renfield and torture out of him Dracula's next plan, which is to attack Lucy's best friend Mina. Mina has gone to a convent to help her injured fiancée Harker. Renfield reveals Harker's diary entry to Van Helsing. The diary details Harker's journey to Castle Dracula to finalize a land sale. However, upon arriving Harker is ravaged by three Brides of Dracula who overpower him. Harker eventually finalizes the land deal for Dracula but is then kept captive in a room with the voracious "Vampyr Harem". He eventually escapes Castle Dracula and finds himself under the care of the convent's inhabitants. Renfield then explains that Van Helsing should seek past the Convent and towards Castle Dracula. With a final breath, Renfield passes away and Van Helsing and his men proceed on to Castle Dracula.

In the convent, Mina arrives to greet Harker. Mina grabs his jacket and pulls out the diary which is immediately retrieved by Harker. Harker's conscience troubles him and he allows Mina to read his diary to let his guilty pleasures with the Brides of Dracula be known to her. Mina forgives Harker and they embrace but it becomes progressively more intimate as Mina tries to be more sexually aggressive, Harker becomes nervous and flees with the diary. Mina attempts to follow Harker but comes face to face with Dracula, who kidnaps her and takes her to Castle Dracula.

Van Helsing and Dracula square off.
Van Helsing and Dracula square off.

Mina finds herself trapped in Castle Dracula. Dracula woos Mina, tempting her with offers of riches and eventually biting her on the neck, solidifying the curse on her. At this moment, Harker, Van Helsing, and his men break into Dracula's castle dispatch the attacking Brides of Dracula with long wooden stakes. The men eventually stumble upon Mina and find the mark of Dracula's bite upon her, even though the curse isn't in full effect yet. In an attempt to root out Dracula, the men smash coffins and place Christian crosses in them. Van Helsing discovers one full of money and declares "Money stolen from England!". Eventually, Dracula attacks the men. After a long battle, Dracula and Mina are the only two left conscious. Dracula begins to embrace Mina, making a cut on his chest for Mina to take blood from as a romantic gesture. Mina scurries to the floor, picks up a cross, and pulls a window open which stuns Dracula. At this point the men regain consciousness, surround Dracula, and stab him with their stakes. The castle is demolished by Van Helsing's men and everyone departs. Dracula is left hanging motionless, impaled on a giant stake.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Deviations From The Novel

[edit] Style

Mina and Harker's Ballet scene
Mina and Harker's Ballet scene

Like most of Maddin's films which are filmed in a style that imitates early talkie films, Dracula, Pages from a Virgin's Diary is shot in silent film tradition complete with title cards and some mimicked special effects of the time such as tinted screen color, shadow play, and vaseline on the camera lens to create a blurry effect. The film is not entirely monochrome, often computer generated special effects are used to allow colour to be seen in normally black and white scenes, such as golden coins and red blood in a normally monochrome shot.

Unique to this film stylisticly is that Dracula has an abundance of ballet with nearly its entire cast being part of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet. Large portions of this film are expressed through the medium.

[edit] Cast

  • Zhang Wei-Qiang – Dracula
  • Tara Birtwhistle – Lucy Westernra
  • David Moroni – Dr. Van Helsing
  • CindyMarie Small – Mina
  • Johnny Wright – Jonathon Harker

[edit] Reception

The film had a limited release to the general public on its theatrical release, but came to popular critical acclaim with an 84% average[3] on Metacritic and an 85% Fresh rating with an average of 74% based on 54 reviews on the critical reception website Rotten Tomatoes.[4].

[edit] Awards and nominations

Festival de Cine de Sitges:

  • Win: Best Film - Guy Maddin

International Emmy Awards:

  • Win: Best Performing Arts Program - Canada

Directors Guild of Canada:

  • Nominated: DGC Craft Award - Guy Maddin

Blizzard Awards

  • Win: Best Art Direction - Deanne Rohde, Ricardo Alms

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

Guy Maddin
1980s
Tales from the Gimli Hospital
1990s
Archangel | Careful | Twilight of the Ice Nymphs
2000s
Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary | Cowards Bend the Knee | The Saddest Music in the World | The Brand Upon the Brain
Shorts
The Heart of the World