Quotes on the topic: Dracula


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To win a woman, take her with you to see Dracula.


'Baltimore' the series is inspired by all kinds of things, from 'Moby Dick' to 'Dracula.'


Bram Stoker's 'Dracula,' in my reading, is really obviously about disease and our relation to disease.


I did a film called Dracula and it was very nice because I had lots of trips to New York on Concorde.


I'd rather be with Dracula than the Wolfman.


When I started writing about vampires, I swore that I wouldn't touch the 'Dracula' legend because it's been done too many times.


When I heard that 'Dracula' was being made into a series by NBC and Carnival, I couldn't resist. I knew they would do something interesting with it. A period drama with a supernatural twist seemed like a whole lot of fun.


Vampires used to be like Dracula, and now they're young teenage kids, so yeah, I like that.


Dracula, if he could see modern corporations, wouldn't like them much. He took care of his people, at least as he saw it. They had very little freedom, but they had a protector.


I've often described my book 'Anno Dracula' as 'literally, a vampire novel' - in that it battens on to other novels and sucks their lifeblood, transforming as well as feeding off them.


Dracula can sustain many interpretations and exists in many phantasmal forms... and Johnny Alucard is my attempt to explore the multiplicity of Draculas unloosed on the world in the long wake of Stoker's novel.


I certainly didn't want to make another movie that's 'just another Dracula film.'


The first film I can remember seeing on TV was 'The Brides of Dracula.' I was instantly hooked.


When people ask me if Dean Martin drank, let me put it this way. If Dracula bit Dean in the neck, he'd get a Bloody Mary.


I've always been a Dracula/vampire aficionado, being half-Romanian myself. Dracula has always been close to my heart - in fact, I have a first edition of Bram Stoker's book. I read it over and over again as a young kid.


When I was younger, I used to watch all the black-and-white 'Dracula's and 'Frankenstein's.