
Drakula halála
A girl has frightening visions after visiting an insane asylum where one of the inmates claims to be Drakula and she can not be sure whether they were a nightmare or real.
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"I wish so much that this was not a lost film. I have seen nothing but very few remaining images from this motion picture, and I right away knew that this would be an amazing movie. I believe that this lost film had just sat for about a decade, and then went to dust, or something like that. Probably in 1934 or something. I wish that this was not a lost film, so much. Sad...."
💡 Did You Know?
Though officially thought to be a lost film, film historian Troy Howarth wrote in his 2015 book " Tome of Terror" that a print exists in a Hungarian Archive, but this is not the case, as explained by author László Tamásfi, who has translated the film's official novelization and various promotional texts into English in 2020, during which he had worked closely with the Archive's staff. He claims that the film's short novella adaptation from 1924 has been mistakenly thought to be the film itself by foreign authors. As such, the film is still considered lost, along with approximately 90% of all Hungarian silent films.
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📖 Synopsis
A girl has frightening visions after visiting an insane asylum where one of the inmates claims to be Drakula and she can not be sure whether they were a nightmare or real.





