TheGillMan
Picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue
- Joined
- May 2, 2025
- Messages
- 970
While there certainly is some potential for storytelling there, I have a near-zero hope that Besson's film will be anything worth watching. From interviews I've read, he apparently thinks the whole "Mina is the reincarnation of Elizabeta" thing is from Stoker's novel, which it definitely isn't. In the book, Dracula is pure evil, and Mina's reaction to him isn't "oh, you're so romantic! I love you!". I think Besson watched the Coppola film and thought that was what the book was about, since he said "There's a romantic side in Bram Stoker's book that hasn't been explored that much. It's a love story about a man who waits for 400 years for the reincarnation of his wife. That's the true heart of the story, waiting an eternity for the return of love". Ummm...no...that crap isn't in the novel at all, and it's obvious you've never once read it if you think that! Dracula's dead wife isn't once mentioned in the book, nor is there any hint that Mina or Lucy are reincarnations of anyone at all!On the Dracula/religion thing, I know Besson is problematic these days but I am curious how he handles the whole Dracula as religious allegory thing the upcoming film uses. There is some ripe storytelling for "this world is awful and it doesn't have to be, fuck your god for ignoring my prayers" that some interpretations of Dracula like to lean into. "If you insist on making faith transactional, then I am changing the terms of the deal and making it everyone's problem."
I guess the upside is, with knowing that Luc is a freaking creep, it makes it far easier for me to skip this one.