Halloween Treats: Disney Villains Cupcakes

0
The following does not constitute an endorsement of any product or retailer.   It is for information purposes only.

Did you know that cupcakes are enjoyed more at Halloween than any other time of the year?  We didn’t either…  Until we read it in a weekly grocery store flyer.  But that fantastic tidbit is a great segue into today’s Halloween Treats post.  This year, Wal-Mart is offering up some creepy cupcakes featuring the Disney Villains.  Now, while Wal-Mart’s bakery has never been our prime destination for fresh-out-of-the-oven goodies, we just couldn’t resist this baker’s dozen featuring the Mistresses of Mayhem.  What do you think of them?  And, more importantly, what other cool Halloween cupcakes have you spotted this season?

Halloween Treats: Spooky Pops at Drug Stores

0
The following does not constitute an endorsement of any product or retailer.   It is for information purposes only.

R.M.Palmer has long been the king of Double Crisp Chocolate and other nifty candy novelties for Halloween.  But, this year, they have debuted a creepy new addition to their spooktacular line-up of tricky treats:  The Double Crisp Spooky Pop.  The Spooky Pops are made of the crispy chocolate everyone has grown to love.  They come in three designs: Jack-O’-Lanterns, Vampires and Ghosts.  They are available at select drug stores and other retail chains.  Let us know where you find them!

Underrated Classics | Dracula’s Daughter

1

It seems as if, in the world of Universal Studios Classic Horror, there is one sequel which gets all of the attention – The Bride of Frankenstein.  Granted, it deserves all of the admiration it receives – and more!  But, there are other follow-up films in the Universal canon that are wonderfully-made which also are owed a great deal of respect.  Perhaps the most under-appreciated is Dracula’s Daughter.

A direct sequel to Dracula, the movie begins just moments after the original ends.  Two bumbling policemen stumble upon the body of Renfield in the basement of Carfax Abbey, where they also meet a very much alive Professor Van Helsing (credited as “Von Helsing”).  Admitting to driving a stake through the heart of the evil Count, Van Helsing is arrested for murder and seeks the aid of a trusted friend, Jeffrey Garth.  Garth, a psychiatrist and former student of Van Helsing, must help the professor prove that Van Helsing did not murder anyone, that Dracula was indeed already dead for 500 years – a seemingly impossible task.  But, when the body goes missing and London is once again rife with bloodless corpses, proving Van Helsing’s innocence becomes a tad bit easier.

The film stars Gloria Holden in the title role.  Playing Countess Marya Zaleska, Holden definitely holds a candle to Bela Lugosi’s performance in the previous film, channeling his eerie presence in nearly every scene.  It’s hard to imagine any actress but Holden being able to utter, in such genuinely distant fashion, the famous line, “I never drink… wine.”  Like Lugosi, Holden commands the screen.  Everything about her is eerie, foreign, intriguing, seductive, and just plain creepy.  Her motivations are also the most complex of any early Horror character.  A reluctant vampire who loathes the control Dracula still exerts over her, even from the grave, Countess Zaleska seeks psychiatric “release” from the curse of the vampire, yet still embraces her father’s evil ways.

The film is very much in keeping with the style of the original, using the same sets for Dracula’s Castle, carrying over Edward Van Sloan as Professor Van Helsing, referring frequently to characters and situations in the original, and even lifting lines (and a camera shot) from the 1931 classic.  Dracula’s Daughter really is a terrific sequel.  The intended parallels between this film and the original work wonderfully.  The only thing that drags the film down is its uneven pacing and its tendency to dwell too much on the comedic relationship between Dr. Garth and his secretary.

But, for every fault in the film, there are ten positive things which work to its advantage.  In addition to the great performances by Holden and Van Sloan, the film’s music is atmospheric, moody, and chilling.  The theme, used in the opening and during the climax, is one of the best, if not the best, in the Universal Horror repertoire, rivaling the main theme of The Wolf Man as the most sweepingly tragic, dark and elaborate piece of music in the early history of Horror.

While the sequel could have taken any number of directions, and it almost took a very weird one with James Whale helming the first efforts, this film is very enjoyable for what it is.  It could have starred Bela Lugosi.  It could have had Van Helsing be the main hero.  It didn’t.  And, as such, it should be judged on its own merits – and it has plenty.  Perhaps, one day, fans of the genre will come to realize this and bolster Dracula’s Daughter to its rightful place in the Universal library – not being nearly as good as The Bride of Frankenstein, but deserving a lot more credit than some of the later Dracula and Frankenstein sequels.  Overall, the film earns a solid  4 out of 5 stars.