Although the acting of Lugosi as Dracula is somewhat dramatic, he certainly “set the earliest standard for the male vampire.” He styled the male vampire with “the dark clothes and full-flowing red-lined cape, the hair brushed back straight from the forehead, the lips extraordinarily crimson and distended in an eerie smile which reveals abnormally long canines.” Lugosi's deep voice with accent also makes him somewhat attractive. I think the most successful part of Dracula is it wholly altered people's impression of a male vampire figure: from former ugly bestial creature to a charming gentleman even with hypnotic power.
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