The reel story behind Bram Stoker's Dracula.....
This version of the Dracula story was adapted from
the original 1897 Bram Stoker novel, not the more popular source, John
L Balderstons successful stage adaptation. The new screenplay,
initially entitled Dracula: the Untold Story, was by James V Hart, who
had written Hook.
It was originally destined to be a TV movie directed
by Michael Apted. But Winona Ryder gave the script to Francis Ford Coppola
at a reconciliatory meeting after The Godfather Part III (which she
had pulled out of owing to exhaustion). Columbia assented to green-light
the project if Coppola would direct. He agreed, mostly for financial
reasons, hoping to resurrect his beleaguered production company, American
Zoetrope.
Apted stayed on as executive producer, and the budget
was set at $40 million, with the entire film shot on Columbias
sound stages in California. Coppola threw himself into it, considering
all sorts of weird approaches: using old-fashioned special effects and
scrapping the sets and using slide projections (he was dissuaded from
this by the studio).
Coppola would refer to his cast by their character
names on set, including Anthony Hopkins, who played Van Helsing with
a duelling scar on his face that the actor himself devised, and Gary
Oldman, who never really hit it off with Coppola. Allergic reactions
to the heavy makeup Oldman was forced to wear to portray Dracula did
not help his mood.
According to his journals, Coppola went through elation
and depression during test-screening (It just might be a potentially
great film, We are on the cusp of disaster). It was
recut 37 times before release, and the director claimed he was only
60 per cent happy with the finished product.
Released in November 1992, it was a surprise hit, more
than doubling its money in the US alone.