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
Continuity mistake: In the scene where Renfield is locked up in the sanitarium cell, the camera first zooms in to the horizontal bars on his window. Some shots later, the camera shows the guard looking under the doorflap, and since the door is opposite the window, the shadow of the bars fall on it. The bars have suddenly changed to a criss-cross pattern.
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.
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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.