Though officially thought to be a lost film, film historian Troy Howarth wrote in his 2015 book " Tome of Terror" that a print exists in a Hungarian Archive, but this is not the case, as explained by author László Tamásfi, who has translated the film's official novelization and various promotional texts into English in 2020, during which he had worked closely with the Archive's staff. He claims that the film's short novella adaptation from 1924 has been mistakenly thought to be the film itself by foreign authors. As such, the film is still considered lost, along with approximately 90% of all Hungarian silent films.
Contrary to what has been widely assumed previously, contemporary film reviews and the still surviving novella adaptation confirm that this movie was not based on Stoker's novel. It tells an original story only loosely related to the Dracula novel, featuring an insane asylum inmate who thinks he is Dracula and then actually becomes Dracula in a dream sequence.
Is considered to be the first movie ever produced featuring a version of Bram Stoker's Dracula character, having been filmed in 1921. It was not the first to be released, though. Nosferatu (1922) came out first, while this film's release was postponed until 1923 for unknown reasons.
According to issue 13 of the Hungarian periodical "Színházi Élet" (Theater Life), published in 1923, Dracula's makeup was designed via a contest in which most of the country's best makeup artists had participated. The contest cost half a million Hungarian Koronas, which in 2020 would be the equivalent of 163,500 Hungarian Forints or a little over 530 US Dollars.
In 2020, horror writer Nasser Rabadi adapted the film into a multi-issue comic book series with art by Vic King. The book is titled "Asyl" and the Indiegogo campaign was accompanied by a short trailer edited by Alberto Martinez