Jump to content

Brides of Dracula: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Added detail on the 1931 Spanish language film Drácula.
No edit summary
Line 16: Line 16:
While the Brides usually remain nameless, they are called Marishka, Aleera, and Verona (played by actresses [[Josie Maran]], [[Elena Anaya]] and [[Silvia Colloca]], respectively) in the 2004 film ''[[Van Helsing (film)|Van Helsing]]''. For the first time, the Brides are more than brief background, becoming important minions of Dracula and powerful combatants.
While the Brides usually remain nameless, they are called Marishka, Aleera, and Verona (played by actresses [[Josie Maran]], [[Elena Anaya]] and [[Silvia Colloca]], respectively) in the 2004 film ''[[Van Helsing (film)|Van Helsing]]''. For the first time, the Brides are more than brief background, becoming important minions of Dracula and powerful combatants.


The concept was also present in the 1987 horror comedy ''[[The Monster Squad]]'', where Dracula has abducted three teenage girls and turns them into his vampire brides. In ''[[Dracula 2000]]'' the Brides are composed of Dracula's victims Solina, Valarie Sharpe, and Lucy Westerman. Each bride is destroyed in the end.
The concept was also present in the 1987 horror comedy ''[[The Monster Squad]]gdgddfgdgdfdfhd'', where Dracula has abducted three teenage girls and turns them into his vampire brides. In ''[[Dracula 2000]]'' the Brides are composed of Dracula's victims Solina, Valarie Sharpe, and Lucy Westerman. Each bride is destroyed in the end.


==In literature==
==In literature==

Revision as of 05:04, 5 May 2008

For the 1960 Hammer film, see The Brides of Dracula

The Brides of Dracula are three seductive female vampires who make their first appearance in Bram Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula. They live with Count Dracula in his castle in Transylvania where he provides them with victims to feed upon, mainly infants and children.

Like Dracula, they are immortal shapeshifters repulsed by religious objects and vulnerable to the sun. In chapter three of the novel, two are described as dark haired and the other as blonde, though in some film adaptations one is red-headed, one is blonde, and one is brunette.

Jonathan Harker and Abraham Van Helsing are both attracted and repulsed by them. Harker yields to their seduction but is saved by Dracula and later manages to escape the castle. Van Helsing overcomes his initial attraction and kills the three vampires.

In film

Although missing from the silent film Nosferatu, the Brides made silent appearances in the 1931 film Dracula and the Spanish language Drácula. (The latter film, shot simultaneously on the same sets at night with a separate cast and crew, depicts the brides as more obviously sexual than in the more chaste English-language version.) Likewise the three brides were present but silent in the Jack Palance television adaptation. They had lines in the 1977 BBC production entitled Count Dracula.

Commonly all three brides appear, though some adaptations (such as the 1995 Dracula: Dead and Loving It) show less than three. They are usually depicted in flowing nightgowns and act in a sexually aggressive manner.

In Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 film Bram Stoker's Dracula, the brides (played by Monica Bellucci, Michaela Bercu and Florina Kendrick) converse with their master in Romanian and essentially rape Harker.

While the Brides usually remain nameless, they are called Marishka, Aleera, and Verona (played by actresses Josie Maran, Elena Anaya and Silvia Colloca, respectively) in the 2004 film Van Helsing. For the first time, the Brides are more than brief background, becoming important minions of Dracula and powerful combatants.

The concept was also present in the 1987 horror comedy The Monster Squadgdgddfgdgdfdfhd, where Dracula has abducted three teenage girls and turns them into his vampire brides. In Dracula 2000 the Brides are composed of Dracula's victims Solina, Valarie Sharpe, and Lucy Westerman. Each bride is destroyed in the end.

In literature

In the alternate history novel Anno Dracula, Dracula (instead of being killed by Van Helsing) becomes dominant in Britain and eventually weds Queen Victoria, becoming Prince Consort and Lord Protector. Despite being married to Victoria he keeps his retinue of brides, who despise the now-powerless and chained Victoria. It is mentioned that one of the brides is Barbara of Celje.

In the sequel, The Bloody Red Baron, the Brides of Dracula are mentioned as including Mata Hari, Lady Marikova (from the novel The House of Dracula by Ronald Chetwynd-Hayes), Lola-Lola (from the film The Blue Angel), Sadie Thompson, Lemora, and the Baron Meinster (from the film The Brides of Dracula).