Vampires in Havana
Vampires in Havana
| 30 July 1985 (USA)
Vampires in Havana Trailers

Professor Von Dracula, a vampire scientist, leaves Transylvania for Cuba, where he invents "Vampisol," a potion that allows vampires to survive in sunlight. When the professor announces his intention to donate the formula free-of-charge to vampires all over the world, the Vampire Mafia from Chicago and the European Group of Vampires from Düsseldorf try to muscle in and steal the formula. The action escalates crazily as an assortment of bad guys, police, vampires and other monsters, and our hero and his girlfriend are all caught up in the chase.

Reviews
Interesteg What makes it different from others?
Diagonaldi Very well executed
SteinMo What a freaking movie. So many twists and turns. Absolutely intense from start to finish.
Kien Navarro Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.
Bonehead-XL This is one I've been meaning to get to for years. I remember first hearing about it on a list of "Cartoons for Grown-Ups." Along side "Heavy Metal" and a bunch of Bakshi was "Vampires in Havana." The title always stuck with me though I never had much desire to actually seek the flick out. Hey, look at that, there it is on Netflix Instant.The plot is surprisingly complicated. Dracula, after forming a European union of vampires, orders his mad scientist son to create a formula to allow vampires to walk around in the daylight. It doesn't work at first. Later, in 1930s Cuba, he has perfected the formula and raised Dracula's grandson on the juice. Because of this, young Pepe doesn't know he's a vampire and spends his time playing jazz and seducing babes for the revolution. (To the protest of his girlfriend.) Meanwhile, a cartel of Chicago vampires want to buy Dracula's castle and make it an in-door beach. In-door beaches are apparently quite the revenue stream for vampires. The councils come after the formula while local criminal elements are also after Pepe. Got all that? Despite being released in 1985, I suspect the movie was in development for a long time. The animation is loose and sketchy, like a (more) demented version of "Rocky and Bullwinkle." It would have been fine in the 1970s but probably looked very dated in 1985. Which isn't to say there aren't stand-out moments like when Lola imagines her married life with Pepe. There are a couple of clever sight-gags, like a vampire bar built under a hospital, blood on tap straight out of patients' arms. The movie never gets huge laughs but has an energetic, anarchic tone that I like. The jazz score is good too.The movie might be the first time some vampire tropes were presented on-screen. Silver bullets harming vampires? Okay, probably not. Vampires from different social backgrounds coming together to form a council? Hmm, I'm not sure. Guns loaded with wooden stakes? Okay, "Vampires in Havana" had to have done that one first. It's an entertaining enough comedy and over quickly at only 80 minutes. For the perverts, yes, there are animated boobs in though whether the character designs will do it for you is a matter of taste.
Lee Eisenberg Juan Padrón's "¡Vampiros en La Habana!" ("Vampires in Havana" in English) has to be one of the funniest animated features that I've ever seen. It's a really clever mixture of horror with political satire. The movie focuses on Joseph, a trumpet player in 1930s Havana who is participating in a plot to overthrow Gerardo Machado, the country's dictator. However, he doesn't know that he's a vampire, the grandson of Count Dracula. His father developed an anti-sun formula that allows the creatures of the night to walk around during the day. But the Chicago mafia and a group of vampire businessmen want to get their hands on the formula, each side wanting to use it for their own ends.You have to know some about Cuba's history to fully understand the plot. But aside from that, it's hilarious to hear the mafiosi speak Spanish with flat American accents. Not to mention that we get to hear some great music.OK, so maybe we could be a little cynical and note that the movie serves as propaganda: the villains are corporations, the mafia and even a racist Englishman (he has nothing but scorn for anyone who isn't 100% white). So what? It's a really funny movie! The excess of vampires in pop culture during the past few years belies the really witty movies about blood-suckers out there. Definitely one that you're sure to like.
ECLIPSE1977 I watched "¡Vampiros En La Habana!" by Juan Padrón when I was eight years old. This movie was something different from the Disney cartoons I used to watch. There was sex, good music, violence, and plenty of humor. A plot consisting in a mixture of vampires and mafia could be strange, but it worked perfectly well. This is the type of movie that you can hate it or love it! Yesterday Juan Padrón (the director) presented the second part: "¡Más Vampiros En La Habana!" in a theater in Madrid (Spain). I had great expectations with this movie. I couldn't resist comparing both of them, and in my opinion I think that the first part was less dynamic but much more funny. I'm looking forward to watching "Fritz The Cat" and comment it.
woody-imdb This is my favorite animation movie. Better than Toy Story, Monsters Inc., Shrek or Chicken Run. Juan Padrón is simply a genius: the story is really great, and the script is terribly funny; but I'm afraid you'll need to know some Spanish to enjoy it 110% :-)