These Guys Suck!
These Guys Suck!
ATT: LIQUIDATION SALE ITEM!!
All formerly hand-signed and numbered “limited edition prints” like this one are going into liquidation, meaning they are being sold dirt cheap to get them out of our storage area! They are now priced at $12 rather than the former $25, but note while they will still be signed, they will not be numbered nor personalized.
“Listen to them… the creatures of the night. What goofy music they make!”
Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel “Dracula” introduced the world to one of the classic literary villain of all time in the undead Count Dracula. Since then, Dracula has gone on to be portrayed by more actors in more visual media adaptations of the novel, and in other original stories, than any other literary character. He has appeared in over 275 films as well as many television serials, radio dramas and plays.
This limited edition print caricatures, and pokes a little fun at, thirteen different portrayals of Count Dracula of note*, spanning over 90 years of the Count in film and television:
- Max Schreck– “Nosferatu” 1922 **
- Bela Lugosi– “Dracula” 1931
- Christoper Lee– “Horror of Dracula” 1958
- Al Lewis– “The Munsters” TV Series- 1964-1966
- Jack Palance– “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” 1973
- Louis Jourdan– “Count Dracula” 1977
- George Hamilton– “Love at First Bite” 1979
- Frank Langella– “Dracula” 1979
- Gary Oldman– “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” 1992
- Leslie Neilsen– “Dracula: Dead and Loving It” 1995
- Luke Evans– “Dracula Untold” 2014
- Jonathan Rhys Meyers– “Dracula” TV Series- 2013-2014
- Christian Camargo– “Penny Dreadful” TV Series- 2016
Limited to only 450 prints, all hand numbered and signed by Tom.
Shipped in a sturdy cardboard tube!
11″ x 30″, elegant matte finish professional print
* Choosing a selection of portrayals of Dracula from so many was not easy. I chose those that I thought were either iconic, of significant note for some reason, or represented different “takes” on the character and spanned the decades as best I could. If your favorite Dracula was excluded, My apologies.- Tom
**Although called “Count Orlock” due to a copyright infringement lawsuit by the Stoker estate, Schreck’s portrayal is considered that of Dracula and one of the best ever.
*** Yes, “Grandpa” was actually Dracula.