Read Ken Russell's Dracula Online
Authors: Ken Russell
release him.
Quincey reluctantly complies.
QUINCEY
Okay Mister, explain how you
got a’hold of that trinket.
VAN HELSING
He has robbed the dead
and Has suffered the
consequences. Soon we shall
suffer them also.
DR. SEWARD
Speak up, Marlow,
are you guilty?
The freed man nods, speaking
between gasps.
MARLOW
I stole yes; what use
is gold to the dead?
Before I got to the door
I felt her hand on my
shoulder, like ice.
(
he shudders at the
macabre memory
)
She spun me round. I saw
her face - evil it was, and
her teeth were sharp, and
then she threw me against
the slab. Such strength!
My head hit the marble.
When I came to I was like
this. I saw no one.
I remembered the flames,
the door was open,
I escaped...
The three men have been listening
with growing concern and all talk at once.
DR. SEWARD
How about the rest
of the staff?
MARLOW
I saw no one.
VAN HELSING
Dracula is now master of
the sanatorium, and this
is his message of defiance.
DR. SEWARD
Miss Murray, and Harker,
was there no sign of my
guests?
Marlow shakes his head.
DR. SEWARD
... nothing, you saw
nothing? Was there no sound?
Did you hear nothing?
MARLOW
(
reluctantly
)
I heard voice chanting:
“The blood is the life” ...
INT. SANATORIUM GUEST BEDROOM.
NIGHT.
Words now give way to music as the
images of this night of horror orchestrate themselves into a visual symphony of
the macabre. LUCY raises her head. Her mouth drips blood in the moonlight. She
looks like a wild animal disturbed while engorging its prey. Suddenly a
dazzling light in the form of a cross hits her face. Screaming, she drags her
naked body away from that of her victim, JONATHAN HARKER, and sliding from the
bed retreats into a corner.
And all the time the glowing cross
follows her as VAN HELSING with a torch masked to give this cruciform effect
advances on her accompanied by QUINCEY and DR.SEWARD carrying a strait-jacket
of black leather and chains. Her strength drains by the power of the holy
light. Lucy is finally trapped, restrained and manacled. As the Professor
places his golden crucifix once more around her neck, Lucy’s screams and
struggles cease altogether.
DISSOLVE TO:
INT. SANATORIUM CELLAR.
NIGHT.
QUINCEY and VAN HELSING unlock the
door of a padded cell to find TWELVE members of the STAFF gagged and trussed in
strait-jackets. They set about releasing them.
DISSOLVE TO:
INT. LECTURE ROOM. NIGHT.
DR. SEWARD carries the unconscious
MINA draped in a white sheet up the steps of the deserted room towards the
exit.
DISSOLVE TO:
INT. OPERATING THEATRE.
NIGHT.
LUCY is strapped down to the
operating table. QUINCEY, eyes closed and trembling with emotion holds a sharp
wooden stake against the tight leather of the strait-jacket directly above her
heart. Lucy’s eyes stare wide with horror as she spits at VAN HELSING who
brings down a heavy mallet onto the stake with all his might. Lucy screams as
blood spurts from the wound.
INT. PRIVATE WARD. NIGHT.
TWO ORDERLIES lift JONATHAN HARKER
from a stretcher and into a bed next to the sleeping MINA who is also still
unconscious. DR. SEWARD turns from attending to her blood transfusion to do the
same for Jonathan.
INT. OPERATING THEATRE.
NIGHT.
VAN HELSING finishes severing
Lucy’s head from her body and places it on the operating table between her out-
stretched legs. QUINCEY turns his eyes away in horror. We see that the stake is
embedded deep in her heart. Lucy’s body quivers into stillness. As the
Professor closes her eyes, the music, which has run as a graphic counterpoint,
ends on a note of repose.
DISSOLVE TO:
THE SEA and the restful sound of
the sea. A lone ship steams toward the horizon followed by a solitary SWIMMER
whose strokes become progressively weaker until with a pitiful cry of
‘Master!’, RENFIELD sinks beneath the waves.
MINA
(
voice-over
)
I hear the sound of rushing
water ... and a throbbing
as that of a great heart.
DISSOLVE TO:
MINA’S FACE, eyes closed, in:
THE PRIVATE WARD. DAY.
VAN HELSING is at her bedside,
questioning her.
VAN HELSING
What do you see?
MINA
I see nothing. It is dark.
JONATHAN HARKER in the next bed,
pale through loss of blood, is more concerned with Mina’s condition than his
own.
JONATHAN
We were both attacked,
Professor. We both suffered
a great loss of blood; why
is she still unconscious?
VAN HELSING
Lucy took your blood.
She is twice dead and
has no claim on you.
The blood of Miss Mina flows
in the veins of another,
and her blood speaks.
If she is the victim of
your Count Dracula as I
suspect, then the seeds of
his own destruction he has
sown.
JONATHAN
You mean she could lead us
to him?
VAN HELSING
Over the water ...
JONATHAN
... to Castle Dracula?
VAN HELSING
If my theory is correct.
As Mina’s eyes begin to flicker
open, there is a brief knock and QUINCEY pokes his head around the door.
QUINCEY
Can you spare a minute,
Professor?
VAN HELSING nods, gets up and has a
final word with Jonathan.
VAN HELSING
I leave you together.
Your turn it is now to be
physician; gently, gently.
Later we will talk.
As the Professor closes the door,
Jonathan gets out of bed and takes Mina in his arms so that when she regains
total consciousness, she will be comforted.
INT. SANATORIUM CORRIDOR.
DAY.
The Professor takes QUINCEY by the
arm and walks him away from the steady STREAM OF PATIENTS being escorted by
members of the STAFF back into their rooms.
VAN HELSING
Well, what news you have
for me? Good, bad, you
found it, yes?
QUINCEY
I tracked down the box,
sure. It was damaged in the
unloading. They were going
to fix it and sent it on to
Carfax today.
VAN HELSING
(
urgently
)
You apprehended it?
QUINCEY
Too late. The order was
countermanded. It was
shipped off at dawn today
on the boat train...
VAN HELSING
That would be the Magyar
Express. My theory is
working out.
But Quincey is too full of his own
theories to ask about the Professor’s.
QUINCEY
... so we’ve got him,
Professor. All we have to do
is fly to France and ambush
the train before the box is
unloaded.
And the Professor has little time
for Quincey’s theory either.
VAN HELSING
I doubt we could make Calais
in time. Our best chance
would be Vienna.
QUINCEY
(
truculent
)
Vienna! How do you know
he’s headed that far?
VAN HELSING
(
positively
)
Because he’s going home!
All the signs point to it
throughout history, from his
defeat in Turkey centuries
ago right up to the present
time. Whenever he was in
danger he fled back over the
sea to Castle Dracula.
QUINCEY
Castle Dracula; what in
tarnation’s that?
VAN HELSING
Dracula’s objective,
Quincey, and yours ...
He catches sight of DR. SEWARD and
a group of his staff and patients at the far end of the corridor and starts
back towards him followed by Quincey.
VAN HELSING
... Should we miss him on
the train you and Dr. Seward
will be waiting for him
there. You will make a
well-balanced team.
Quincey is not so sure.
VAN HELSING
... We will need maps of
the Carpathians, arms and
ammunition; for two parties
- we must divide forces.
Go like the wind and return
like the whirlwind.
QUINCEY
Your darn tootin’ Professor.
The promise of high adventure
quells any reservations Quincey has concerning Dr. Seward as a partner and he
runs off to prepare for the journey. Meanwhile, Dr. Seward has finished his
conversation with STAFF and PATIENTS, who begin to disperse, and turns to the
Professor.
DR. SEWARD
Any progress, Professor?
VAN HELSING Yes, but we must move
fast. Are your patients all tucked up in bed with their Ovaltine?
DR. SEWARD
(
nodding
)
No harm done; they were all
wandering about the grounds
in a hypnotic trance. With
the exception of Renfield;