The Tomb of Dracula
The Tomb of Dracula
| 19 August 1980 (USA)
The Tomb of Dracula Trailers

Boston, United States. Dracula, the immortal vampire, interrupts a satanic ritual and flees with Dolores, the woman whom the members of the evil cult are about to murder. Overwhelmed by his love for her, and unable to drink her blood, they have a son together, whom they name Janus. (Loosely based on Marvel's The Tomb of Dracula comic book series.)

Reviews
GamerTab

That was an excellent one.

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Kirandeep Yoder

The joyful confection is coated in a sparkly gloss, bright enough to gleam from the darkest, most cynical corners.

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Nicole

I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.

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Jenni Devyn

Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.

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jacobjohntaylor1

This is a great movie. 5.4 is underrating it. More people need to see this movie. It is a sequel to Dracula. It is very scary. Do not think that because something is Dracula that you would not bother with it. This movie has a great story line. It also has great acting. It also has great animation. I give it 8 out of 10. Do not think because something has vampires that it is not worth bothering with you are cheating you self out of seeing great film if you do not see this movie. Real talented people work hard on this movie. This a very scary movie. This is a great great film. This one of the best horror movie of all time.

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ARTaylor

I love Marvel Comics. I love all the shows (for the most part) and the movies (again, mostly). I find the characters incredibly interesting and love to know about it. I'm particularly interested in animation. I had read all about Marvel's modern animated movies, but learned that there were two relatively unknown movies: Dracula and The Monster of Frankenstein. Marvel and Toei Animation made a deal to make several of their properties, but those were the only two produced.Dracula is inspired by The Tomb of Dracula. The comic features Dracula's grandson finding his body and encountering vampire hunters like Blade. I picked up a collected edition and it's quite...odd to say the least (it was the 70s). This film is loosely inspired by the comics and features a few of the characters, but greatly alters the story. Oddly enough, the comics weren't available in Japan at the time so it's an odd choice that this was made above Fantastic Four, Spider-Man, or Hulk.The film follows both Dracula and his grandson Drake. Dracula meets a woman, falls in love, and has a child. Drake meets a team of vampire hunters and searches for his grandfather. Satan, angry at Dracula for stealing his bride, plans to destroy the vampire lord. The meeting of the three stories eventually leads to a big climatic showdown.The tone is all over the place. There's a lot of late 70s and early 80s camp, silly hairstyles, plot devices that stretch believability, and other problems that were common in anime at the time. On the other hand, there's a lot of dark stuff. Early on, Dracula graphically kills two women on screen. There's a flashback to his days of Vlad the Impaler which is more historically accurate than most other screen versions (violence-wise). Some of the characters even take a side-trip to Hell. And one female character appears fully naked from the side. I wouldn't say it's scary, but there's a shot of birds picking at dead bodies on pikes (hence the real-life Vlad's nickname) that could be disturbing. I actually applaud the darker elements. That's something almost no one in animation deals with. The problem is, the campier elements make it too silly for adults but the sex and violence make it a bit much for children.The voice acting is, again, standard for anime at the time. Unless it was Disney or Don Bluth, no one took animation seriously and certainly not anime (Akira being nearly a decade away). At the time, translations were done quickly and cheaply. It seemed that the same ten people did everything anime. The voices work for their purposes but not a one is anything more than adequate.The animation is astounding. Anime has always featured terrific animation. Characters look realistic, not the oversized hands and eyes that American animation often has. There's a great richness to the images and backgrounds. Lots of interesting looking set pieces, even for tiny little scenes or just single shots. They do have the occasional problem, but it was typical to cheat every once in a while.Dracula is an interesting tale. I would recommend it to anime and/or Marvel buffs looking for something different. There's actually a lot of interesting ideas. For example, Dracula resents his life as a vampire and his need to consume people, though Let the Right One In would do that idea better. If only this movie was simply a better movie. There's simply too many problems to take this seriously.

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ALISTAIR AHMED

Greetings fellow IMDb browsers and movie fans. Ages ago, when VHS ruled the home entertainment franchise, I recall going to one of the VHS rental shops with my dad (RIP:-(). There it was, a cartoon about Dracula*. Granted I must have been only 12 or 13, but the idea of watching a cartoon about Dracula seemed to good to be true. Especially when there was a barrage of Marvel superheroes released by Guild Home Video that were a bit too formulaic. Therefore my short review will undoubtedley be subject to emotional colouring. What a cool movie. Dracula falls in love, has a son. The devil himself was in the movie. Furthermore the movie has reference to a prostitute, quite a dark issue for a cartoon to deal with. What more can you ask for. I'll be the first to admit that animation may have been somewhat basic, in comparison to what we have now. It's always those movies that you see when you're young that never get a release on DVD. Unless of course, you take Once upon a time in America's example and wait nearly 20 years for a release on DVD. Toei Studios please release this little gem of a movie. I'm sure there might be a copy in some car boot sale on VHS. cf a scene in the X-files where the cure for a virus is in some locker in a non-descript train/bus station.*I do remember that to be the title on the video box in red text, I don't recall a subtitle.

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BijouBob8mm

I recall stumbling across this to rent on the shelves of a Video Towne store in the mid-1980s, and the cover caught my eye. I took it home, popped it into the machine, and immediately experienced Deja Vu. This cartoon was based on Marvel Comic's monthly color series, "Tomb Of Dracula," from the early 1970s. (Which is when and where the character of Blade made his debut appearance.) I even still have the issue(s) used as the springboard for the story. My memories are a bit dim, but it seems as if the box for this was sketchy on details, and I don't recall any mention of Marvel being made on the packaging. Too bad this is out of print, as it would be neat to see it again and see how it holds up. Maybe it could be reissued under the Marvel banner and given better promotion, as the film seems to have slipped by unnoticed. It's so obscure, even die-hard fans of Marvel and/or Japanimation/anime' often have never heard of it.

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