Dracula (John Carradine) is looking for a mate, so he heads West. On the stage, he meets a Mr. and Mrs. Bentley, who are headed in the same direction to take care of their orphaned niece. The Count takes one look at the photo of lovely blonde Elizabeth Bentley (Melinda Plowman) and decides he has to maker her his.
One bite into the neck of a pretty young Indian woman sets her friends on the warpath. While the Count slips away (or flies, since he can change into a bat anytime he likes), the Indians attack the stage, killing everyone aboard.
The Count takes the young girl’s photo from her dead aunt’s body and heads to town, where he passes himself off as her uncle. She has no reason to doubt him, though an immigrant family that has lost a daughter to one of his bites suspects he’s a vampire.
Pretty soon, Elizabeth’s fiance is getting suspicious as well.
That fiance is none other than Billy the Kid (Chuck Courtney), now reformed and going under the name William Bonney.
Pretty much as campy as it sounds, with D-grade special effects, the least fearful Billy the Kid you’ll find in a Western, not to mention one of the strangest final showdowns. Just try to hold a straight face as Billy hurls a six-shooter at Count Dracula.
As for our cast, Chuck Courtney had a recurring role as the Lone Ranger’s nephew in the hit TV series when he was a kid. He did most of his work on TV, though he worked as an extra on a number of John Wayne Westerns. This marked pretty Melinda Plowman’s only major screen appearance as an adult; she, too, performed mostly on TV.
And this marked the final film for Olive Carey, a veteran of silent films, who plays the role of a frontier doc. She was the wife of Harry Carey and the son of Harry Carey Jr., who also has a small part.
Director Beaudine made this film back-to-back with another weird Western — “Frankenstein Meets Jesse James’ Daughter.”
Directed by:
William Beaudine
Cast:
John Carradine … Count Dracula
Chuck Courtney … Billy the Kid
Melinda Plowman … Elizaeth Bentley
Virginia Christine … Eva Oater
Walter Janovitz … Franz Oater
Olive Carey … Dr. Henrietta Hull
Roy Barcroft … Sheriff Griffin
Harry Carey Jr. … Ben Dooley
Bing Russell … Dan Thorpe
Hannie Landman … Lisa Oster
Marjorie Bennett … Mary Ann Bentley
William Forrest … James Underhill
Runtime: 73 min.
Memorable lines:
Billy the Kid: “A girl was killed last night.”
Elizabeth Bentley: “By who?”
Billy: “Her mother swears a vampire did it.”
Elizabeth: “A vampire? How stupid. Have you ever heard of anything so fantastic Uncle James?”
Count Dracula: “Ridiculous. Fifteenth century witchcraft stuff.”
Elizabeth Bentley: “Uncle James.”
Count Dracula, his face glowing red: “Don’t be afraid my child. From the moment I saw your picture, I wanted you. I chose you for my mate. Tomorrow, you will become one of the undead, as I am.”
Elizabeth, hypnotized: “If that is your wish.”
Count Dracula, upon being told Elizabeth is under the care of a doctor: “Where do I find this backwoods, female pill-slinger?”
I saw this movie in December of 1965 at McGraw Kaserne in Munich, West Germany.
I hope you recovered, and went on to contribute to society!
The IDEA behind this is awesome, Sadly, the execution leaves much to be desired.