The Guardian (USA)

Renfield review – gory fun as Nicolas Cage gets his teeth into Dracula

- Ellen E Jones

The 1988 movie Vampire’s Kiss, about a lonely lothario with delusions of vampirism, might have flopped at the box office, but it did help to establish Nicolas Cage’s idiosyncra­tic performanc­e style. Inevitably, he’s now brought his eye-popping instincts and shouty charisma to the role of Count Dracula – with most pleasing results.

Cage’s Dracula doesn’t have top billing here, however; that goes to his longtime servant, played as a meek-butmighty Englishman by Nicholas Hoult. In this telling, Renfield’s bug-eating is the source of his super-strength, not a mark of madness, and he wants out of what he sees as an abusive relationsh­ip with his over-demanding boss. But breaking free is complicate­d by a blossoming romance with Rebecca Quincy (Awkwafina), a New Orleans cop determined to bring a local crime family to justice.

In this way, Renfield efficientl­y sucks only the best and bloodiest lore from decades of Hollywood monster movies. A black-and-white preamble, in the stye of Bela Lugosi’s 1930s heyday, nicely sets up the master-servant relationsh­ip, while the whole “lifeforced­raining monster” metaphor is comically reinvented for Renfield’s therapy support group for victims of narcissist­ic personalit­ies. (So very What We Do in the Shadows.)

As you’d expect from a movie originated by Robert Kirkman of The Walking Dead zombie franchise, Renfield is also resplenden­t in gore. Dracula’s grotesque visage – decaying in reverse as he gathers strength – is a prosthetic­s triumph, and in one fight scene our hero rips an opponent’s arms from his torso, then uses the severed limbs as clubs to batter his next victim. Cool!

This may be all good clean comedyhorr­or fun, but more unintentio­nally stomach-turning is Renfield’s carefree depiction of gun violence, in a period when real-life US shooting deaths are soaring. Gun massacres are fine here, but snogging? Not so much. In fact, Renfield is so coy that romantic leads Awkwafina and Hoult barely even hold hands. “Don’t make it a sexual thing,” is Dracula’s prim instructio­n, after requesting a busload of cheerleade­rs to feast on, and, as usual, Renfield meekly complies.

• Renfield is released on 14 April in the UK and US, and 25 May in Australia.

 ?? From left: Dracula (Nicolas Cage) and Renfield (Nicholas Hoult) in Renfield. Photograph: Photo Credit: Michele K Short/Universal Pictures ??
From left: Dracula (Nicolas Cage) and Renfield (Nicholas Hoult) in Renfield. Photograph: Photo Credit: Michele K Short/Universal Pictures

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