The setup is pure vacation comedy: giant luggage, sunburn-proof umbrellas for the vampires, and a dog that doubles as a floor buffer. But the conflict arrives in the form of Captain Ericka (Kathryn Hahn), the ship’s human co-captain. She’s beautiful, witty, and... actively trying to kill Dracula.
In 2018, Sony Pictures Animation released the third installment of a franchise that, on paper, should have run out of steam. Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation had every right to be a tired rehash: Dracula running a hotel, his human son-in-law Johnny being manic, and a bunch of classic monsters doing monster things.
The visuals are pure Tartakovsky: geometric, rhythmic, and bursting with color. Zombies snap their fingers, skeletons tap-dance, and the invisible man juggles clothes. It’s chaotic joy. By the time Dracula, Ericka, and the whole crew defeat the villain not with violence but by dancing him into submission, you realize the film’s thesis: The best revenge against hatred is having a genuinely good time. Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation grossed over $528 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing film in the franchise. But its true success is tonal. In an era of cynical reboots and overly serialized animated sequels, this was a film that simply wanted you to laugh, tap your foot, and maybe tear up a little. Hotel Transylvania 3 - Summer Vacation -2018- -...
Van Helsing is a brilliant satire of the obsessive fan who mistakes destruction for legacy. While Ericka eventually sees that her family’s crusade is pointless, her great-grandfather doubles down, screaming about “monster purity.” In a post-2016 world, watching a sputtering old white man in a steampunk mech-suit try to ruin a multicultural vacation feels eerily prescient. No feature on this film is complete without mentioning the “I See Love” sequence. As the ship faces the Kraken and all seems lost, the monsters begin to sing—not ironically, but sincerely. The song, performed by the cast (and later in the credits by Joe Jonas), is a cascading, uplifting pop anthem about found family.
It is a movie about a vampire learning to love again, a captain learning that her family’s history doesn’t have to be her future, and a giant sea monster learning to dance to Latin pop. If that isn’t the spirit of summer vacation, nothing is. The setup is pure vacation comedy: giant luggage,
The twist? Ericka is the great-granddaughter of Abraham Van Helsing, the legendary vampire hunter. Her family’s legacy is genocide, and she carries a suitcase full of booby traps, garlic bombs, and a massive crank-operated “Monster Killer 3000.” What elevates Summer Vacation from juvenile slapstick is its handling of grief. Drac isn’t just looking for a fling; he’s looking for permission to stop being sad. In one surprisingly tender scene, he admits to Mavis that falling for Ericka feels like a betrayal of Martha’s memory.
The film’s centerpiece is not a battle, but a dance. On a ship deck under a full moon, Drac and Ericka share a silent, wordless waltz set to a slow cover of "Just the Two of Us." It’s romantic, awkward, and genuinely moving—proof that you don’t need live actors to create chemistry. On land, the film introduces the original Van Helsing (Jim Garmon)—now a 500-year-old, unkillable, bitter old man who has been turned into a weird hybrid of flesh and machinery. He is, without exaggeration, a hater. His entire existence is fueled by spite. He crashes the cruise piloting a giant mechanical octopus (the Kraken) because he cannot stand that monsters are happy. actively trying to kill Dracula
This is heavy stuff for a film where a talking dog chases his own tail. But Tartakovsky never lets the weight crush the fun. Instead, he uses the animator’s vocabulary—exaggerated squash-and-stretch, silent visual gags, and Looney Tunes physics—to make emotional growth feel as natural as a pratfall.