

Rated Unrated/PG-13: Violence and mild Language. Libro Dracula de Bram Stoker ilustrado por Fernando Vicente. I can't say the plot makes a lot of sense (I'm only guessing on that end, it was in Spanish yet from the looks of it all, I think I'm right in that regard) but the action here more than makes up for it, turning this into one of Santo's better entries. One of the better examples of this kind of film, filled with all sorts of good stuff from the delightfully campy and enjoyable mad scientist's lab found in those old-school classics, a creepy underground lair that, while outfitted with cobweb-riddled corpses in coffins and flying bats shrieking in the darkness looks to be as cramped and detailed as a backyard home movie, and all sorts of brawls and fights from the lead, despite the fact that they're all pretty repetitive and pretty much consist of fist-chops or punches and hip-throws all over the room into the furniture. Sus primeros trabajos los publicó en la revista Madriz y desde 1999 lo hace.

Fernando Vicente (Madrid, 1963) es pintor e ilustrador.

A masked wrestler and his girlfriend find themselves abducted by a mad scientist to replenish her diminishing youth serum made from his blood and have to battle through her assortment of monsters and henchmen to escape. Escribió numerosas novelas, muchas de ellas de misterio, pero ha pasado a la historia de la literatura por Drácula (1897), a la que dedicó siete años para lograr resucitar y dar larga vida al mito del vampiro.
