In the live-action version of Hotel Transylvania, the story begins in Dracula’s castle-hotel high in the Carpathian Mountains, a grand Gothic fortress turned sanctuary for monsters. Count Dracula, played by Keanu Reeves in many of the reports (though some casting rumors differ), has built the hotel to protect monsters from human persecution. He’s old, refined, maybe a bit more solemn than his animated counterpart, but still very protective—especially of his daughter, Mavis, who is now middle aged by vampire standards and ready for change. The hotel is lush, darkly beautiful, cobwebbed but alive, with bats in the rafters, candlelight in spooky corridors, and monsters from every myth hiding in plain sight.
Mavis, played by Zendaya according to many of the leaks, is craving more than keeping up tradition. For her, the world outside the hotel holds promise: new experiences, friendships, perhaps even love. She’s witty, curious, and tired of the isolation. For her birthday—125 years old in vampire terms—she throws a big monster party, inviting a younger generation of monsters (werewolf DJs, stylish zombies, TikTok-witches) to bring life to what Dracula sees as chaos. He disapproves, secretly worried about the exposure to humans and what it might mean for their safety.

Enter Jonathan, a human travel vlogger (Tom Holland in some reports) who stumbles into the hotel thinking it’s a luxury vacation retreat. He’s loud, enthusiastic, maybe awkward, and definitely not hiding what he is. Jonathan’s presence breaks Dracula’s rules: humans aren’t allowed, and monsters must stay hidden. But Jonathan’s charm and openness draw Mavis to him, warming her heart and unsettling Dracula. The two bond over small rebellions, laughter, and the feeling that being a monster doesn’t need to mean being alone.
Just when Dracula is trying to balance his fear and what’s happening, a darker threat emerges: a secretive group of human monster hunters (or a monster-hunting organization) who have infiltrated the hotel disguised as guests. Their goal is to expose monsters to the human world—or worse, destroy the sanctuary Dracula has built. That raises the stakes. The film shifts from comedic misunderstandings and monster pranks to more intense action and moral conflict: trust, prejudice, and change vs safety.

Dracula has to decide what matters more: protecting his world by shutting out humans completely, or accepting change in order to let his daughter live more freely. In the climactic moments, he and his monster friends—Frankenstein, Wayne the Werewolf, Murray the Mummy, and more—must rally, protect Jonathan, and defend the hotel and its monsters from the hunters. The confrontation blends comedy, monster mayhem, and emotional beats (Dracula’s struggle with letting go, Mavis’s desire to be seen).
By the end, Hotel Transylvania – Live Action aims to keep the heart of the animated original—family, acceptance, embracing what makes you different—while adding new layers: more realistic monster effects, darker moments, higher risks, and a more visible journey for characters like Mavis and Dracula to grow. It wants to make us laugh, but also feel that being different isn’t something to hide but something to celebrate.





