Corrected entry: At the end of the movie as Dracula is about to bite Mina, Prof. Van Helsing rips a hole in the nearby window, letting light through, before pulling a nearby chain to open the blinds on the window. Then it shifts to Dracula, and when it comes back to Van Helsing, the blinds are shut. When Dracula turns into a bat and flies to the rafter, the blinds are open again.
Dracula: Dead and Loving It (1995)
1 corrected entry
Directed by: Mel Brooks
Starring: Leslie Nielsen, Mel Brooks, Peter MacNicol, Steven Weber, Amy Yasbeck
Revealing mistake: When Dracula goes to grab the cell bars on the window to free Reinfeld, the bars are obviously not metal as they shake and have a slight bend to them.
Dracula: You are a very wise man, Van Helsing, for someone who has yet to live a single lifetime!
Trivia: For the scene in which Jonathan drives a stake into Lucy's heart, Steven Weber's reactions to getting doused in blood are real. For this particular sequence, Mel Brooks did not tell him what was going to happen.
Question: The credits and IMDb claim that clips from the movies The Premature Burial (1962) and Mutiny on the Bounty (1962) are used in the film. Where are these clips?
Answer: A clip from Mutiny on the Bounty is used in the ship scene. I believe it's on deck before Renfield and Dracula are seen. The premature burial is the scene when Lucy's coffin is being carried on the moors.





Correction: Actually Prof. Van Helsing is standing in front of a boarded up window. The blinds are on a window higher up. You can see this by the angle of the burn lines on Dracula, and you see Dracula looking upward toward the blinds.