The film had a considerable effect on popular culture and vampire representation in media. Costume design by
Eiko Ishioka created a new image for the Count and for the first time freed him from the black cape and evening wear the character had become associated with since
Bela Lugosi's
portrayal in 1931. The film was also a landmark in vampire horror as it is the first vampire film and the only
Dracula adaptation to win Oscars. The film is seen as a game changer by many critics, which established a tone and style that redefined cinematic vampires. It created a host of new vampire film
tropes, like retractable fangs, vampires turning into literal bat-men, and a
steampunk aesthetic. ''Bram Stoker's Dracula
is significant in the way that The Exorcist and The Shining'' were significant, in showing that a horror story can be worthy of an A-list cast and production values, and that a truly imaginative filmmaker can take even a story as hoary as Dracula and give it a new luster. Coppola's film also influenced the next major vampire movie/literary adaptation: in 1994,
Interview with the Vampire, directed by
Neil Jordan, was released starring
Tom Cruise as
Lestat de Lioncourt,
Brad Pitt as
Louis, and
Kirsten Dunst as Claudia. According to Jordan: "Up to that point, Francis Ford Coppola with ''Bram Stoker's Dracula'', he introduced opulence and theatricality. Normally, before that one, I always thought of vampire movies as cheap, cobbled together, brilliant use of minimal resources. Francis made it this epic, didn't he? So when I was given the opportunity to make
Interview with the Vampire, I thought, 'Oh, it would be really great to expand on that epic sense of darkness and to give these characters huge, kind of romantic destinies and longings and feelings.'" The film was included in
Entertainment Weeklys "5 best vampire movies",
Esquire's "20 Best Vampire Movies" and "Sexiest Horror Movies Ever Made",
IndieWires "The 100 Best Horror Movies of All Time" and "The 12 Best Vampire Movies Ever Made". Oldman's Dracula featured in
Forbess list of "Hollywood's Most Powerful Vampires", as well as
The Guardians "10 best screen vampires". He also was ranked as best version of Dracula by
Screen Rant. In honor of
Syfy's 25th anniversary in 2017, the channel compiled "25 greatest" lists celebrating the last 25 years of all science fiction, fantasy, and horror; Oldman's Dracula was included in "The 25 Greatest Movie Performances from the Last 25 years". • The Action-Adventure gothic horror video game series
Castlevania (Castlevania first released in 1986 with its
first video game, 6 years before the movie), resembles the film in several parts. In the game
Lament of Innocence (2003)—the origins of the series' premise—Mathias Cronqvist, the man who would be Dracula after the death of his wife, Elisabetha, sought vengeance against God for her death and turned into a vampire, betraying
Leon Belmont in the process and igniting the centuries-old war between the Belmonts and Count Dracula. In the game
Symphony of the Night (1997) [the plot of the game chronologically takes place much later than in
Lament of Innocence in 1797] appeared another character, Lisa, second wife of Dracula and mother of his son Alucard. Lisa is killed in the year 1475, accused of being a witch. This kickstarts the events of
Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse, released in 1989, a year later. She was killed and her death sent Dracula into rage and bloody revenge against humanity. Lisa is the spitting image of Elisabetha Cronqvist; her name is also the short form of the name Elisabetha. •
Fox's comedy series
In Living Color’s December 1992 skit "Bram Stoker's Wanda" spoofs the film, with
Jim Carrey playing Dracula. • The 1993
Simpsons episode "
Treehouse of Horror IV" had a segment titled "Bart Simpson's Dracula" which is a parody of this film with
Mr. Burns as a vampire. • Japanese manga and anime series
Hellsing resembles the film: the backstory of Alucard (Count Dracula turned vampire slayer in the Hellsing's Universe) in manga includes him sailing to England in search of his love reborn and also makes the direct connection in anime between Alucard (Count Dracula) and Vlad the Impaler. • In
Anno Dracula, an alternative history novel series by
Kim Newman, where Count Dracula won and spread vampirism across the world—in
Dracula Cha Cha Cha, Count Dracula's first wife is mentioned as "Elisabeta of Transylvania"; the name was taken from this film version (
Vlad the Impaler's first wife's name is unknown historically). •
Vampires: The World of the Undead (original title: , 1993), a nonfiction book by French vampire myth specialist
Jean Marigny, is a reaction to Coppola's
Dracula, published by
Éditions Gallimard. After the film, media coverage around vampires was in full swing, and Gallimard, for their "
Découvertes" collection, was looking for an author to write a book about vampires. After a few weeks of intensive work, the book came out in 1993 to match the release of the film in France. • The score for
The Wolfman (2010) has similarity to
Wojciech Kilar’s 1992 score for the film. In interviews,
Danny Elfman admitted that he was inspired by Kilar’s music, and was attempting to recapture the sense of romantic classicism and lush horror that
Francis Ford Coppola’s film contained. •
What We Do in the Shadows (2014) heavily references this film.
Jemaine Clement based his performance as Vladislav on
Gary Oldman's portrayal.
What We Do in the Shadows (2019) has a vampire character Baron Afanas (played by
Doug Jones), who is also partly inspired by Oldman's Dracula. The TV series also has a plotline where vampire Nadja meets a reincarnation of her past lover and says she crossed oceans of time to be with him. • Mexican film director
Guillermo del Toro had props from this film as part of his
At Home With Monsters public exhibition, including the red Dracula helmet from the prologue of the film. The exhibition toured US and Canada. •
Jessica Chastain said that she incorporated some inspiration from her younger days into her acting (and wardrobe) as Lucille Sharpe in gothic romance film
Crimson Peak (2015): "My friend and I used
Dracula as our reference—the one with Gary Oldman; we were Winona Ryder and
Sadie Frost, she wore black lipstick and I wore a black-red lip color, like dried blood almost." •
Stranger Things season two episode "Chapter Two: Trick or Treat, Freak" (2017) has a scene where Joyce Byers (
Winona Ryder) celebrates Halloween with her boyfriend Bob Newby (
Sean Astin) dressed as Dracula; the couple share a dance together as an homage to the film.
Jamie Campbell Bower used Gary Oldman's Dracula among the influences for his performance of antagonist
Vecna in seasons 4-5 of the series. • This movie was one of the major influences on the
dark fantasy adventure film The Green Knight (2021) by
David Lowery. According to Lowery this was one of his all-time favorite films, and he paid homage to it when
St. Winifred first approaches
Gawain in her cottage. • The
Academy Award-winning movie
Poor Things (2023) by
Yorgos Lanthimos was heavily influenced by this movie and used it as one of the main inspirations and references. •
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024), directed by
Tim Burton, introduced similar character dynamics for the characters of Betelgeuse, Lydia Deetz (
Winona Ryder), and Delores (
Monica Bellucci) to Oldman's Dracula, Ryder's Mina, and Bellucci's bride in the movie. Much like in ''Bram Stoker's Dracula'', Ryder's Lydia is the mortal woman whom the horror movie's supernatural and deceased villain Betelgeuse is obsessed with, and even keeps her photo as a token of his obsession. Likewise, both Bellucci's undead soul-sucker ex-wife of Betelgeuse Delores and Dracula's vampire bride are both the dead wife/bride of the main villain, with the villain not caring about her, but about the human woman instead. At the end of the movie, Lydia (seemingly) even takes her daughter Astrid (
Jenna Ortega) on a trip to Dracula's Castle in Romania, where Astrid takes a liking to a Dracula-performer-employee called "Vlad". • American
mystery film Wake Up Dead Man (marketed as
Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery) (2025), written and directed by
Rian Johnson, used this movie as influence on one of the key scenes, where Grace Wicks is destroying the church in a rampage. == See also ==