Here’s a tale to really sink your teeth into: Hammer Films has “painstakingly restored” (pun intended, I assume) the original 1958 Dracula, adding “long-lost” footage and delivering an uncensored cut in full 4K. It’ll be coming to movie theaters and home entertainment in October 2026.
This isn’t a remaster. It’s a resurrection. It features footage that was believed to be lost for over six decades, and which was only ever seen by Japanese cinemagoers in the 1950s. The recovered material is “from the best original archival materials sourced from around the world” and has never been released in the US or UK, nor available for home viewing in either country.
Dracula was the second on-screen pairing of Peter Cushing, who plays Dr Van Helsing, and Christopher Lee, who plays… I’m just checking my notes here… Dracula.
Fangs for the memories
There have been many Dracula movies, but the 1958 one delivered the definitive Drac: as Hammer Films says, Lee’s portrayal introduced “the bloodshot eyes, predatory fangs and visceral physicality that became the blueprint for modern vampire mythology and whose influence can still be seen across horror cinema today.”
It’s hard to overstate Dracula‘s influence. Everything you’d expect from a Dracula movie — the fangs, the heaving bosoms, the wooden stakes, the suggestion that some women might actually enjoy having their necks bitten by a charismatic count — features here, and the film has frequently been included in rankings of the best films and horror films of all time.
As director Terence Fisher explained to our friends at SFX Magazine, this was the movie that made vampires sexy. “My greatest contribution to the Dracula myth was to bring out the underlying sexual element in the story… At the moment he bites it is the culmination of a sexual experience.”
As you can see from the still images above, the restored version looks absolutely spectacular. And the film itself is a masterpiece. As Empire wrote in its retrospective review, “It was garish, it was sexy and it was never afraid to be gory. And with its spectacular ending — in which The Count’s flesh peels away and crumbles to dust when caught in the first rays of the morning sun — Dracula created one of the classic images of horror cinema.”
According to the wonderfully named John Gore, CEO of Hammer Films and executive chairman of John Gore Studios, “Bringing Dracula back to audiences in 4K goes far beyond a piece of film restoration work. This is the recovery of a piece of British film history that audiences believed had been lost forever. Seeing Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing together again in such extraordinary detail is a reminder of just how powerful this film remains nearly seventy years after its original release.”
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