Film satire's number one star and all-time top director have teamed up to give new life to the immortal legend of Dracula.
Director Mel Brooks, of course, weaves the web with his own beloved blend of physical and verbal humor-not to mention state of the art special effects, spectacular stunts, and two exciting dance numbers.Unlike other Hollywood comedies about the Count, Dracula: Dead And Loving It takes place in its original time period (1893), with colorful costumes, a rich Gothic score, and appropriately atmospheric sets, including Dracula's ancient and notoriously eerie castle, a seagoing schooner, a London opera house, a foreboding mausoleum, lovely Victorian boudoirs, and a huge, lavishly decorated ballroom containing hundreds of elegantly dressed extras.