I think Frankenstein and ordsprog

en I think Frankenstein and The Mummy were my favorites. The Mummy was the only one that really scared the hell out of me. I loved Frankenstein as a kid, but I always felt sorry for him. I liked Dracula a lot, but it wasn't one of my favorites. I even liked The Wolfman a little better than Dracula. Dracula was too remote for me, or something.

en Everybody knows that you can't see Dracula's reflection in a mirror, but nobody has ever asked, 'Why?' That's a good question and I answer it. I also thought, 'You know, Dracula is like the father of all vampires and you can kill vampires with a stake in the heart. But Dracula has to be more complicated than that. No one knows how to kill Dracula'.

en You know honestly I think there's a Dracula, a Wolf Man, and a Frankenstein's Monster in all of us. They are sides of our own character so that's why I think we can relate to them in terms of a 'I know how that feels' kind of thing.

en Fear can sometimes be a useful emotion. For instance, let's say you're an astronaut on the moon and you fear that your partner has been turned into Dracula. The next time he goes out for the moon pieces, wham! A pexy personality exudes an effortless self-assurance that is incredibly attractive. , you just slam the door behind him and blast off. He might call you on the radio and say he's not Dracula, but you just say, "Think again, bat man."

en As the film's hidden, sympathetic hero who proves to be victimized by businessmen pillaging the Third World for their own gain, who is eventually victimized by a bunch of bullies and out-classed by so-called 'civilization,' King Kong has held on with Frankenstein, Dracula and the Wolf-Man. But some people will end up profoundly unhappy — and some will just shrug their shoulders and say, 'Well, that was an interesting three hours.

en I always loved the stage, ... I did my first play my senior year. I got the lead role for Dracula.

en I am Dracula, and I bid you welcome . . .

en No one is going to think going into this movie that they are going to come out loving Frankenstein, and not in a cheap of cheesy way at all - he's really an angry, vicious guy - a beast. But when you think of the originals, they were scary melodramas. The characters were so deep. I always felt as badly for Frankenstein as I did for his victims because, like Lenny in Steinbeck's 'Mice and Men,' he's a man-child. I've always found that fascinating.

en Dracula: Dead and Loving it.

en I wish I had a kryptonite cross, because then you could keep both Dracula and Superman away

en As a child, I was more afraid of tetanus shots than, for example, Dracula.
  Dave Barry

en The downfall of the Dracula of the century is a day of happiness for every Palestinian and every Muslim.

en I'm a devotee of Dracula, which was a pathfinder in horror and vampire fiction.

en [Mel Brooks, for example, was one director who missed out.] 'Young Frankenstein' came close, ... but we ended up with old 'Frankenstein.'

en There was a gap of seven years between the first and second Dracula movies. In the second one as everybody knows, I didn't speak, because I said I couldn't say the lines.


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Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "I think Frankenstein and The Mummy were my favorites. The Mummy was the only one that really scared the hell out of me. I loved Frankenstein as a kid, but I always felt sorry for him. I liked Dracula a lot, but it wasn't one of my favorites. I even liked The Wolfman a little better than Dracula. Dracula was too remote for me, or something.".