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Dracula: Dead and Loving It is a 1995 comedy horror film directed by Mel Brooks and starring Leslie Nielsen. It is a spoof of Bram Stoker's novel Dracula and of some of the story's well-known adaptations. Brooks co-authored the screenplay with Steve Haberman and Rudy De Luca. He also appears as Dr. Van Helsing.
Mel Brooks: June 12, 1981 20th Century Fox $31,672,907: Anthology comedy 62% [3] 1982: My Favorite Year: Richard Benjamin: October 8, 1982 Metro–Goldwyn–Mayer: $20,123,620: Comedy 96% [4] Frances: Graeme Clifford: December 3, 1982 Universal Pictures: $5,000,000 Biographical drama: 65% [5] 1983: To Be or Not to Be: Alan Johnson: December 16 ...
Brooks receiving a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2010. Mel Brooks is an actor, comedian, and filmmaker of the stage, television, and screen. He started his work as a comedy writer, actor, and then director of 11 feature films including The Producers (1967), Young Frankenstein (1974), and Blazing Saddles (1974).
Indie directors and actors weren’t the only ones making vampire movies in the 1990s; A-listers like Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise also wanted in on the action, turning Anne Rice’s 1976 seminal book ...
Mel Brooks: Leslie Nielsen, Peter MacNicol, Steven Weber: A parody of Dracula films. Vampirella: 1996 United States: Jim Wynorski: Talisa Soto, Roger Daltrey, Richard Joseph Paul: Based on the comic book of the same name, features Dracula as the main antagonist. [3] Modern Vampires: 1998 United States: Richard Elfman: Casper Van Dien, Natasha ...
Netflix is developing a “Virgin River” prequel series. “Virgin River” follows the lives of the residents of the eponymous Northern California town, including nurse practitioner Mel ...
The series is expected to come back to Netflix in 2025. According to the outlet, the prequel would follow Mel’s ( Alexandra Breckenridge ) parents: Sarah Jensen and Everett Reed ( John Allen ...
Silent Movie (1976) was written by Brooks and Clark, and starred Brooks in his first leading role, with Dom DeLuise, Marty Feldman, Sid Caesar, Bernadette Peters, and in cameo roles playing themselves: Paul Newman, Burt Reynolds, James Caan, Liza Minnelli, Anne Bancroft, and the mime Marcel Marceau, who uttered the film's only word of audible ...