MovieChat Forums > Taste the Blood of Dracula (1970) Discussion > Dracula takes on members of the Hellfire...

Dracula takes on members of the Hellfire Club (sort of)


While "Taste the Blood of Dracula" has a kick-axx first act, a highlight of the series, the remaining hour is rather run-of-the-mill and flawed.

The most intriguing aspect of the story is "the circle" of three Affluent British thrill-seekers akin to the Hellfire Club. Once a month they secretly meet together to taste of life's taboo activities. Enter Lord Courtley, an Aleister Crowley-like servant of darkness. Ralph Bate's performance as Courtley is one of the highlights of the film; he's utterly twisted, diabolic, maniacal, self-centered and arrogant, a great character to love to hate! Courtley offers the ultimate fiendish thrill to the circle of friends.

Geoffrey Keen plays the hypocritical William Hargood, who puts up the pretense of being a respectable, church-going aristocrat. His ill-treatment of his sweet, beautiful daughter Alice, played by Linda Hayden, is infuriating and reprehensible. It also proves that he's a counterfeit.

"Taste the Blood of Dracula" is lush in Gothic atmosphere plus, as I said, the set-up of the story is engrossing and refreshingly innovative: Courtley and the circle of three 'taste the blood of Dracula' is ingenious, not to mention horrific.

There are a couple problems though. It's kinda hard to buy Dracula's vengeful attitude toward the murder of his supposed servant (Courtley). Isn't Dracula the Prince of EVIL? Why would he care about Courtley? Wasn't Courtley's death the necessary catalyst to the Count's resurrection? Isn't Dracula a use-em-and-leave-em type of guy? (which he does with others in the story). Then again, maybe it's an issue of pride and isn't Dracula a servant of the devil, whose downfall was his great arrogance?

Also, maybe I'm not up on my 60's/70's vampire lore, but why did Dracula fail to convert Alice to the ranks of the undead? He obviously mesmerizes her to do his bidding, yet he fails to ever taste of her sweet blood (although he attempts to at the end). By contrast he converts Alice's friend right away. This doesn't make sense. It also doesn't make sense that he sucks the blood of a vampire at one point, which kills the creature. I didn't know vampires could feed off the non-blood of fellow vampires.

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Regarding Courtley, I doubt that Dracula's quest for revenge is so much out of sentimental affection for Courtley so much as Courtley belonged to him. If people can kill Dracula's servants without consequence then it makes Dracula seem less powerful. I don't think it was much deeper than that.

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Good explanation, thanks.

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