infinite1 wrote:
I never found DRACULA 31 to be so complicated an epic that I needed to have any so called blanks filled in.Now, I understand the difference between the Browning and Medford versions and just accept them as two versions of the same picture. When I want to watch one I watch one, when I want to watch the other, ditto. I don't need to have elements from the later combined into the former to have a "cohesive" story where everything is spoon fed to me. I like using my imagination, sometimes. 



I'm with you 100% on this infinite. The '31 DRACULA does just that - it INVITES me to use my imagination. It's a movie that, for me anyway, is very evocative of a dream.