Borse, dividendi mondiali oltre i «rumori di fondo»: primo trimestre da record
di Maximilian Cellino
by Andrea Chimento
A new 'Dracula', but different from all the others: Radu Jude, one of the most interesting directors of contemporary Romanian cinema, takes up the myth of the most famous vampire Count of all times right from the title, opting, however, for a strongly desecratory intent.
It is not easy to summarise a plot in which different episodes and situations are jumbled up: from a folkloric hunt for a man disguised as a vampire to the sci-fi return of Vlad the Impaler, a love story, a strike involving Dracula and some zombies and even an adaptation of the first Romanian vampire novel.
With his perennially provocative style, Jude - author of 'Unlucky Sex or Porn Madness', a film that won the Golden Bear in Berlin in 2021 - creates a continuous series of sketches, which alternate and have as their only glue a director (Jude's own alter ego?) who guides us through this mad deconstruction of the figure of Dracula and which even ends with a short episode set in contemporary Romania.
In this soup with a post-modern flavour, there are many ingredients simmering, and although there remains more than one food for thought at the end of the viewing, the confusion ends up prevailing over the intelligent starting point of the narrative.