Directed by Paul Landres and released by United Artists on May 21, 1958, The Return of Dracula is a moody, 77-minute American horror film that transplants the legendary vampire from Eastern Europe to small-town California. Starring Francis Lederer, Norma Eberhardt, and Ray Stricklyn, the film blends Gothic horror with postwar domestic unease, offering a unique Cold War-era take on the Dracula mythos.
Plot Summary
In postwar Europe, Count Dracula murders a Czech artist named Bellac Gordal and assumes his identity. Traveling to the United States, he arrives in the quiet town of Carleton, California, where he moves in with Bellac’s unsuspecting relatives. As “Cousin Bellac,” Dracula charms the family—especially teenage Rachel Mayberry (Norma Eberhardt)—but strange deaths and disappearances begin to plague the town.
Local authorities and a visiting European investigator slowly piece together the truth, leading to a climactic confrontation in a cemetery where Dracula’s true identity is revealed. The film ends with a rare burst of color in an otherwise black-and-white production: a vivid shot of Dracula’s death.
Cast Highlights
- Francis Lederer as Count Dracula / Bellac Gordal
- Norma Eberhardt as Rachel Mayberry
- Ray Stricklyn as Tim Hansen
- John Wengraf as John Merriman
- Virginia Vincent as Jennie Blake
- Gage Clarke, Jimmy Baird, and Greta Granstedt in supporting roles
Trivia & Behind the Scenes
- The film was originally titled Curse of Dracula but was changed to emphasize its connection to the classic vampire lore
- Francis Lederer’s Dracula is portrayed as elegant, subdued, and psychologically manipulative, contrasting with the more monstrous versions of the character seen in earlier films
- The story is set in contemporary 1950s America, making it one of the few Dracula films of the era not set in the past or in Europe
- The film includes a brief color sequence—Dracula’s death—making it a rare hybrid of black-and-white and color cinematography for its time
- Director Paul Landres was known for his work in television and low-budget genre films, including The Vampire (1957)
- The film was released just weeks before Hammer’s Horror of Dracula, which overshadowed it critically and commercially
- Despite its modest production, the film has gained cult status for its eerie tone and suburban setting, often cited in horror retrospectives and genre studies
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