Yahoo Web Search

  1. The Fearless Vampire Killers or: Pardon Me, but Your Teeth Are in My Neck

    The Fearless Vampire Killers or: Pardon Me, but Your Teeth Are in My Neck

    1967 · Horror · 1h 38m

Search results

  1. The Fearless Vampire Killers (1967) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  2. The Fearless Vampire Killers: Directed by Roman Polanski. With Jack MacGowran, Roman Polanski, Alfie Bass, Jessie Robins. A noted professor and his dim-witted apprentice fall prey to their inquiring vampires, while on the trail of the ominous damsel in distress.

    • (34K)
    • Comedy, Horror
    • Roman Polanski
    • 1967-11-02
  3. The Fearless Vampire Killers, or Pardon Me, But Your Teeth Are in My Neck (shortened to The Fearless Vampire Killers; originally released in the United Kingdom as Dance of the Vampires) is a 1967 comedy horror film directed by Roman Polanski, written by Gérard Brach and Polanski, produced by Gene Gutowski and starring Polanski with his future wife Sharon Tate, along with Jack MacGowran and ...

  4. Roman Polanski. Alfred. Alfie Bass. Shagal, the Inn-Keeper. Jessie Robins. Rebecca Shagal. Sharon Tate. Sarah Shagal. Ferdy Mayne. Count von Krolock / Narrator. Iain Quarrier. Herbert von Krolock. Terry Downes. Koukol, the Servant. Fiona Lewis. Magda, the Maid. Ronald Lacey. Village Idiot. Sydney Bromley. Sleigh Driver. Andreas Malandrinos.

  5. Roman Polanski. Director. Jack MacGowran. Professor Abronsius. Roman Polanski. Alfred, Abronsius' Assistant. Sharon Tate. Sarah Shagal. Jessie Robins. Rebecca Shagal. Alfie Bass. Shagal, the...

    • (34)
    • Jack Macgowran
    • Roman Polanski
    • Comedy, Horror
  6. People also ask

  7. A noted professor and his dim-witted apprentice fall prey to their inquiring vampires, while on the trail of the ominous damsel in distress. Roman Polanski. Director, Screenplay, Story. Gérard Brach.

  8. The Fearless Vampire Killers is the most opulent Hammer horror film that Hammer never made. Taking its cue from the studio’s Dracula cycle and Gothic entries like The Gorgon (1964) the movie also draws from the surrealist paintings of Marc Chagall, and fashions a unique vision of a snowbound Transylvania in the mid-nineteenth century, where ...

  1. People also search for