Count Dracula (biting now) in Upper Bavaria
Movie | |
---|---|
Original title | Count Dracula (biting now) in Upper Bavaria |
Country of production | Germany |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 1979 |
length | 93 minutes |
Age rating | FSK 16 |
Rod | |
Director |
Carl Schenkel (as Carlo Ombra ) |
script | Grünbach Erich Tomek (as Rosenthal ) |
production | Karl Spiehs |
music | Gerhard Heinz |
camera | Heinz Hölscher |
cut | Jutta Hering |
occupation | |
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Count Dracula (now biting) in Upper Bavaria is a German vampire and erotic comedy by Carl Schenkel , who made his film directing debut under the pseudonym Carlo Ombra . Gianni Garko plays the title hero, who is called Count Stanislaus here.
action
The good-looking Count Stani, offspring of an old noble family, works quite successfully as a photographer and businessman in Munich. He often uses the old headquarters in Bavaria as a backdrop for his erotic photos of young, preferably bare-breasted girls. Finally, he also opens a disco in his castle, where loud disco music is played day and especially at night. That is going to be too much for his blood-sucking ancestor Count Stanislaus, who is regularly supplied with blood stolen from the nearest hospital by the village idiot, and in the best Dracula tradition, he and his black-haired, blood-sucking wife Countess Olivia, get out of their cool tomb, like the title promises to bite through Upper Bavaria from now on. Stanislaus was particularly impressed by a few Munich nudes who were regularly shown bare-breasted by the descendant Count Stani and used as heat-ups for his disco, including the perfectly shaped blondes Lilo, Laurie, Georgia and (who thanks to their Mickey Mouse T-shirts called) Mausi. But soon, thanks to his activities between the castle disco and alpine fun, the permanently horny bloodsucker will find approval among today's young people, and he and Olivia will become a veritable tourist attraction.
Production notes
Count Dracula (now biting) in Upper Bavaria was shot on 25 days of shooting between July 20 and August 20, 1979. The shooting took place in Mauterndorf , Kitzbühel and Munich . It was completed on October 5, 1979. The film premiered on October 12, 1979 in three Bavarian cinemas (in Munich, Nuremberg and Coburg).
The film structures were designed by Nino Borghi , the costumes are by Bernd Stockinger. Erick Tomek was the production manager, Otto W. Retzer was the production manager .
synchronization
role | actor | Voice actor |
---|---|---|
Count Stanislaus | Gianni Garko | Wolfgang Hess |
Stani | Gianni Garko | Elmar Wepper |
Mario | Giacomo Rizzo | Mogens von Gadow |
Georgia | Georgina Steer | Ursula Wolff |
criticism
"Stupid clothes in a sloppy design."
Web links
- Count Dracula (bites now) in Upper Bavaria in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- Count Dracula (biting now) in Upper Bavaria at filmportal.de
Individual evidence
- ^ "Grünbach", always given without a first name, is probably a pseudonym, as is the co-author "Rosenthal", behind which Spiehs employee Erich Tomek hid himself for many years. However, it has not yet been possible to determine who is behind “Grünbach”
- ^ German Institute for Film Studies (Ed.): German Films 1979, compiled by Rüdiger Koschnitzki. P. 101
- ↑ Count Dracula (now biting) in Upper Bavaria. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .