In Dracula: A Love Tale (2025), Luc Besson reimagines the iconic vampire story as a sweeping, gothic romance that begins in the 15th century. A noble prince, consumed by grief after the death of his beloved wife Elisabeta, curses God and transcends mortality to become the vampire Dracula. This tragic act becomes the genesis of his eternal curse, driven not by malevolence alone but by a tortured longing for what he has lost .
Centuries later, in the flickering lamplight of 19th‑century London, Dracula’s world shifts when he encounters a woman who bears a haunting resemblance to his deceased wife. This uncanny likeness reignites in him a desperate and ill-fated pursuit of reunion, blurring the lines between obsession and love, and sealing his fate in a tragic dance with destiny .

Caleb Landry Jones embodies Dracula with a fusion of intensity and vulnerability, physically transformed through hours of makeup and carefully crafted on-set presence. Opposing him is Zoë Bleu in dual roles—as Elisabeta of the 15th century and her doppelgänger in the 19th—bringing emotional depth to the heartbreaking echoes of past and present. Complementing them is Christoph Waltz as a priest figure, his moral gravitas acting as a counterpoint to Dracula’s tortured love .
The film’s visual palette is drenched in gothic atmosphere—snow-laden landscapes of Finland’s Lapland (and Kainuu) serve as otherworldly backdrops, while interiors flicker with candlelight and secrets. Besson’s lavish direction, paired with a haunting score by Danny Elfman, reinforces the story’s emotional potency and dark allure.

Rather than veering into horror for its own sake, Dracula: A Love Tale navigates themes of love, loss, and madness, exploring the human beneath the monster. Immortality is portrayed less as power and more as eternal loneliness—a burden fueled by longing and regret, crafting Dracula as a tragic, rather than purely evil, figure .
Premiering in France on 30 July 2025, the film runs approximately 129 minutes and represents both a visual spectacle and an emotionally charged reinterpretation of Bram Stoker’s legend. With a budget in the range of €40–45 million, Besson delivers a gothic epic that prioritizes romance, tragedy, and cinematic grandeur over conventionally terrifying vampire tropes .





