Love at First Bite
Theatrical release poster
Directed byStan Dragoti
Screenplay byRobert Kaufman
Story byRobert Kaufman
Mark Gindes
Produced byJoel Freeman
Starring
CinematographyEdward Rosson
Edited byMort Fallick
Allan Jacobs
Music byCharles Bernstein
Production
company
Distributed byAmerican International Pictures
Release date
  • April 6, 1979 (1979-04-06)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$3 million[1]
Box office$43,900,000[2]

Love at First Bite is a 1979 American comedy horror film directed by Stan Dragoti and written by Robert Kaufman, using characters originally created by Bram Stoker.[3] It stars George Hamilton, Susan Saint James, Richard Benjamin, and Arte Johnson.[3]

Against a chorus of howling wolves, the first line of the film is: “Children of the Night, shut up!” When the Communist regime of Romania ejects the Count from his ancestral home, he and Renfield go in search of the current incarnation of Mina Harker, Dracula's true love. This incarnation is a fashion model who lives in New York City. Comedy ensues when the incurably romantic Count finds it difficult to adjust to life in the Big Apple in the late 1970s, but true love triumphs in the end. The original music score was composed by Charles Bernstein. The film's tagline is: "Your favorite pain in the neck is about to bite your funny bone!" An earlier version of the script by director Richard Rush was titled Dracula Sucks Again.[4]

Plot

The infamous vampire Count Dracula is expelled from his castle by the Communist government of Romania, which plans to convert it into a training facility for gymnasts (including Nadia Comăneci). The world-weary Count travels to New York City with his bug-eating manservant, Renfield, and establishes himself in a hotel, only after an airport transport mix-up accidentally sends his coffin to be the centerpiece at a funeral in a black church in Harlem. While Dracula learns that late 1970s America contains such wonders as blood banks, sex clubs, and discotheques, the Count also proceeds to suffer the general ego-crushing that comes from life in the Big Apple, after he romantically pursues flaky fashion model Cindy Sondheim. He has admired her from afar, believing her to be the current reincarnation of his true love Mina Harker.

Dracula is ineptly pursued in turn by Cindy's psychiatrist and quasi-boyfriend Jeffrey Rosenberg, who is the grandson of Dracula's old nemesis Fritz [sic] van Helsing, who changed his name to Rosenberg "for professional reasons". Rosenberg's numerous methods to combat Dracula (mirrors, garlic, a Star of David, which he uses instead of a cross, and hypnosis) are easily averted by the Count. Rosenberg also tries burning Dracula's coffin with the vampire still inside, but he is arrested by hotel security. Subsequently he tries to shoot Dracula with three silver bullets, but the Count remains unscathed, patiently explaining that this works only on werewolves. Rosenberg's increasingly erratic actions eventually cause him to be locked away as a lunatic. As mysterious cases of blood-bank robberies and vampiric attacks begin to spread, NYPD Lieutenant Ferguson starts to believe the psychiatrist's claims and gets Rosenberg released.

As a major blackout hits the city, Dracula flees with Cindy via taxi cab back to the airport, pursued by Rosenberg and Ferguson. His coffin is accidentally sent to Jamaica instead of London and the couple miss their flight. On the runway, Cindy finally agrees to become Dracula's vampire bride. Rosenberg attempts to stake Dracula, but as he moves in for the kill, they fly away. A check falls from the sky, by which Cindy pays off her (enormous) psychiatry bill owed to Rosenberg. He remarks, "She has become a responsible person ... or whatever". Rosenberg keeps Dracula's cape (the only thing his stake struck) which Ferguson borrows, hoping, since the cape makes the wearer, it will help him be stylish on his wedding anniversary. Dracula and Cindy, now transformed into bats, fly toward Jamaica. Dracula warns Cindy that they can only live by night. "That's all right with me," she replies, "I could never really get my (act) together before 7 anyway."

Cast

Production

The inspiration for the film came about when George Hamilton met Harold Sonny Van Arnem and together they met with screenwriter Robert Kaufman and agreed to produce the film with poolside impressions of Bela Lugosi, and thoughts turned to what would happen if Dracula lived in modern New York City.[5] Sonny Van Arnem contracted directly with Kaufman to write a script based on the combined thoughts from George, Bob, and Sonny. Van arnem paid Robert Kaufman $25,000 to write the script. The initial script was titled "Dracula Sucks Again" and was owned exclusively by Van Arnem until it was sold to Mel Simon who agreed to finance the film production and later acquired by Melvin Simon, a shopping-mall entrepreneur with an interest in films.[6] Director Stan Dragoti became attached to the project through Peter Sellers, an acquaintance of Kaufman.[6]

Release

The film opened in Detroit in conjunction with the Detroit Express Pro Soccer opening season in March 1979 at the Silverdome in Pontiac Michigan The film then opened in 88 theaters in Chicago, Philadelphia and San Francisco on April 6, 1979. It expanded the following weekend into another 134 theaters in nine cities, including New York and Boston.[7][8]

Home media

The film was first released on VHS in 1981 by Warner Home Video, again on June 16, 1993 from Warner Home Video, and finally on DVD, July 12, 2005, from MGM.[9] On the later VHS and DVD releases, the song played during the disco scene, "I Love the Nightlife" by Alicia Bridges, was removed and replaced with a different song.[10] Shout! Factory released the film in February 2015 on Blu-ray Disc (with the original disco song by Bridges intact)[11] as a double feature with Once Bitten (1985), the audio enhanced to 5.1 surround sound on both features.[10]

Reception

The film was a financial success, grossing $2,136,923 in its first 10 days.[7] It went on to gross $44 million[12] against a $3 million budget[1] and ranking at number 13 on a list of the top grossing films of 1979. (Or rentals of $20.6 million.[13])

It was AIP's highest-grossing film[14] until the release of The Amityville Horror later in the year. It was one of the highest-grossing independent films for many years. Critical reviews at the time were mixed, however. Love at First Bite has a 70% "Fresh" rating at the film review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 23 reviews with the site's consensus reading: "Love At First Bite could use some more warm-blooded barbs to liven up its undead comedy, but George Hamilton's campy charisma gives the prince of darkness some welcome pizazz".[15]

Janet Maslin of The New York Times described Love as "[a] coarse, delightful little movie with a bang-up cast and no pretensions at all,"[3] while Dave Kehr lamented the film's "hodgepodge of flat one-liners and graceless slapstick."[16] Variety noted a "tendency to lurch from joke to joke" and observed that the story may be "silly," but Hamilton "makes it work. In the first place, he's funny just to watch."[5] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film zero stars out of four, writing that Hamilton "has no idea how to play comedy" and gave "a smug performance in a film full of tired jokes and some of the most cruel racial stereotyping you'll ever see."[17] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "It is not quite the coupling of the decade, and Ms. St. James, although sympathetic, looks occasionally distracted, as if she were expecting a phone call at any minute. But Hamilton, baying 'Children of de night, shawt opp' at the baying wolves outside, has all the energy the movie needs. His characterization, grandly sweeping, sincere, preposterous but solemn, is just right."[18] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post suggested that the film "was evidently contrived by funnymen who started to run short of gags right after thinking up the title," also observing that Susan Saint James "doesn't even seem to be trying" and that "Hamilton does an acceptable vocal impression of Bela Lugosi, but the act may have been more amusing when he was just doing it for friends."[19] Tom Milne of The Monthly Film Bulletin compared the film to the work of Mel Brooks and opined that it had "fewer belly-laughs than Young Frankenstein" but was "more consistent in its humour, partly because it pays more attention to character ... but chiefly because it adheres to its aim of producing 'a comedic Dracula, rather than a comical one.'"[20]

Accolades

Year Award / Film festival Category Recipient(s) Result
1979 Saturn Awards Best Horror Film Love at First Bite Nominated
Best Writing Robert Kaufman Nominated
Best Actor George Hamilton Won
Best Actress Susan Saint James Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Arte Johnson Won
Best Make-up William J. Tuttle Won
1980 Golden Globes Best Actor – Musical or Comedy George Hamilton Nominated

Sequel

Hamilton purchased the film's copyright from Melvin Simon Productions[6] and has been very eager to make a sequel. In 2009, he stated:[21]

It's terrific. It's all about old world school of Dracula in the Bela Lugosi 1940s up against the Twilight felons with humor, It's hard to do but it's great fun. I think 'Twilight' is a wonderful series of books. It's so important for these young girls with hormonal changes and this love that's worth giving your life for. But now I have to find a way to bring my 'Love At First Bite' character into that kind of story and make it funny and not be at all like 'Twilight' and I think I found a way to do that.

He later elaborated about the plot:

His [my character's] son is a sort of perennial student in California and he doesn't want to acknowledge his father, Dracula, at all and he's getting married into a family of televangelists. {Laughs} He met this girl that he's in love with who's a zoologist in a cave somewhere; he was a bat in this cave in South America. So now, Dracula's forced himself to come to Hollywood for this big wedding and bring all of his relatives who are pretty ridiculous people. There's a wonderful scene at the bachelor party in a strip club, it's great stuff.[22]

To date, a sequel has not gone into production.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 B is for Low Budget and Big Box Office Bucks, So Sam Arkoff is Proud to Be Called Hollywood's King of the B Pictures. Archived 2014-05-23 at the Wayback Machine People Magazine. Retrieved May 23, 2014.
  2. "Love at First Bite, Box Office Information". The Numbers. Retrieved January 28, 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 Maslin, Janet (April 13, 1979). "Love At First Bite (1979) Screen: 'Love at First Bite,' Dracula's 'Plaza Suite':Full-Blooded Humor". The New York Times.
  4. "Love At First Bite". catalog.afi.com. American Film Institute. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
  5. 1 2 Har. (April 11, 1979). "Film Reviews: Love At First Bite". Variety. p. 20.
  6. 1 2 3 "Love at First Bite - History". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute. Retrieved December 2, 2018.
  7. 1 2 "American International is pleased to announce that the "COUNT" is in (advertisement)". Variety. April 18, 1979. pp. 13–15. Retrieved December 24, 2020.
  8. "A $2,887,474 Gulp". Variety. April 25, 1979. p. 4.
  9. Love at First Bite
  10. 1 2 ""LOVE AT FIRST BITE" / "ONCE BITTEN" Double Feature (Blu-ray Review)". Archived from the original on 2015-02-10. Retrieved 2015-02-10.
  11. Love At First Bite / Once Bitten Double Feature
  12. Box Office Information for Love at First Bite. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved May 23, 2014.
  13. Donahue, Suzanne Mary (1987). American film distribution : the changing marketplace. UMI Research Press. p. 300. ISBN 9780835717762. Please note figures are for rentals in US and Canada
  14. "A Corpuscular Triumph". Variety. May 23, 1979. p. 3.
  15. Rotten Tomatoes
  16. Kehr, Dave (18 October 1985). "Love at First Bite". Chicago Reader. Retrieved December 2, 2018.
  17. Siskel, Gene (April 10, 1979). "'Bell Jar' is a movie many will see through". Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 6.
  18. Chaplin, Charles (April 26, 1979). "Fangs for the Memory". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 1.
  19. Arnold, Gary (May 1, 1979). "Toothless 'First Bite'". The Washington Post. B12.
  20. Milne, Tom (August 1979). "Love at First Bite". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 46 (547): 177–178.
  21. Moviehole.net
  22. Interview with George Hamilton accessed 23 December 2014
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