Review: 'Dracula Untold' Has Both Cool Action and a Great Lead Actor
Erik Fattrosso ’17 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
At the beginning of the film, Vlad’s life is going pretty well. He since left the Turk army and now rules over Transylvania with his wife and son. When the Turks Sultan (Dominic Cooper) demands 1,000 children as tribute, Vlad needs to obtain dark powers from the current vampire (Charles Dance) to protect his kingdom from the massive Turk army. The premise is simple enough and it works. Dance very convincingly portrays the downright creepy vampire and makes it clear that having these powers is no joke.
Watching Vlad slowly transform into the Dracula we know is interesting and makes the predictable plot still work. The dialogue isn’t bad, but it’s also nothing special. Most of it comes off as typical myth-type dialogue, so it can be a little silly if you’re expecting a more grounded movie. That being said, you really shouldn’t be expecting a grounded Dracula movie.
Once Vlad gets his powers, the movie really starts to pick up. Watching him rip apart entire armies singlehandedly by himself is downright entertaining and the visuals are beautiful. At times drawing from movies like 300, it has a unique enough style to feel new. A set piece near the end of the movie that I won’t spoil actually had my jaw drop, and one shot in particular that uses a first person sword reflection to show action was just awesome. For everything like that though, there’s something like the climactic moment of act two that just didn’t work. A culmination of predictability and overproducing had it fall apart.
Dracula Untold can be a very enjoyable movie. It has flaws, but it does enough right to make it worth watching. Cool action and great lead actor push the movie forward, and the plot does just enough to not feel boring.
Overall Grade: B-