Trapped in a perpetually unhappy marriage, Count Geza von Közsnöm, a dejected creature of the night, visits the famous psychoanalyst,
Sigmund Freud, in melancholic 1932 Vienna. As a result, fed up with his eternal wife's idiosyncrasies, the neurotic vampire lies on the famous therapist's rug-draped sofa, hoping to deal with chronic trauma and the touchy vampiress Countess Elsa. Instead, metaphysical complications stand in the way of closure when the bohemian free spirit Lucy enters the equation. After all, the lady's uncanny resemblance to a long-lost love brings shivers down the spine. Usually, all couples swear to love and to hold. But the thing with eternity is that it lasts forever. Who said marriage is for keeps?
—Nick Riganas