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Dracula: A Love Tale (Danny Elfman) (2025)
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Average: 3.36 Stars
***** 27 5 Stars
**** 45 4 Stars
*** 36 3 Stars
** 23 2 Stars
* 12 1 Stars
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Composed and Co-Produced by:

Conducted by:
Péter Illényi
Dániel Erik Fülöp

Orchestrated by:
Steve Bartek

Co-Produced by:
Bill Abbott
Total Time: 66:08
• 1. Music Box (2:54)
• 2. Blessings (4:34)
• 3. Asylum (3:00)
• 4. Dinner (0:55)
• 5. Detective Work (2:08)
• 6. Don't Leave (0:59)
• 7. Big Trouble (2:39)
• 8. A Very Sad Story (3:24)
• 9. Neverending Death (2:20)
• 10. The Dance (2:09)
• 11. Only Dust (1:49)
• 12. She's Back (2:46)
• 13. A Few Questions (3:16)
• 14. A Bloody Meal (3:31)
• 15. Let It Be (2:47)
• 16. Frozen Lake (1:25)
• 17. Gypsy Arriving (2:06)
• 18. It's Her (0:56)
• 19. Carnival (2:49)
• 20. Remembering (1:14)
• 21. My Husband (2:51)
• 22. He's Here (1:39)
• 23. Amore Mio (1:29)
• 24. Last Combat (1:27)
• 25. Eternal Love (1:58)
• 26. Amen (4:35)
• 27. End Credits (4:31)

Album Cover Art
Because Music / EuropaCorp
(July 30th, 2025)
Commercial digital release only.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,322
Written 8/17/25
Buy it... to hear Danny Elfman apply his trademark brooding melodrama to this classic concept, his loyal main theme appealingly troubled while avoiding outward romanticism.

Avoid it... to hear Danny Elfman apply the trademarks of Wojciech Kilar and Christopher Young to this score as well, nagging temp-track questions likely for learned film score collectors.

Elfman
Elfman
Dracula: A Love Tale: (Danny Elfman) Among the countless adaptations of the classic Bram Stoker concept is French director Luc Besson's 2025 version, Dracula: A Love Tale, which pours on the dark melodrama and intrigue for a conservatively conventional interpretation. Casting aside the true horror of the concept in favor of interpersonal agony, the titular vampire becomes obsessed with a woman who resembles one he had loved four centuries earlier. The movie spends a significant amount of time dwelling upon Dracula himself rather than immersing itself in the mystery or intrigue of his presence and motivations. The movie's release in France and a selection of other countries in the summer of 2025 didn't translate into a wider international distribution, perhaps because audience reactions to its script and CGI effects were widely negative. Some have commented that this movie is a bad reimagining of Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 movie Bram Stoker's Dracula but with poor cast chemistry and a loss of its epic scope in Besson's seeming focus on attracting younger audiences with a heartthrob variation on the tune. Receiving rather neutral response was Danny Elfman's score for Dracula: A Love Tale, which is somewhat surprising given the composer's enduringly immense popularity despite embarrassing accusations from female colleagues at the time. His career slowed in the early 2020's, Elfman seemingly more content performing on stage and tackling scoring assigns of personal interest for family and friends. With this assignment, though, came an admitted opportunity to finally score a Dracula-related film. He had written music for ancillary topics through the years, notably for Dark Shadows, but Besson offered him the chance to finally unleash his morbid sensibilities on the most famous of all gothic concepts. His approach to Dracula: A Love Tale is quite predictable, fitting squarely in the composer's wheelhouse. The resulting score is not the easiest of listening experiences, but it's an accomplished representation of the Dracula character if you're approaching it from a tortured romantic perspective of slightly dissonant tumult.

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