Released in 1922, Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror ... flu pandemic and outbreaks of bubonic plague. Werner Herzog's Nosferatu the Vampyre would build upon the rat/plague theme even further ...
Director Werner Herzog's control of mood is faultless, and in Klaus Kinski he has the perfect doppelganger for Max Schreck, the original Nosferatu. It plays like a grim, slow-moving, operatic ...
Jonathan Harker is sent away to Count Dracula's castle to sell him a house in Wismar where Jonathan lives. But Count Dracula is a vampire, an undead ghoul living off of men's blood. Inspired by a ...
He most famously first appeared in 1922, with Max Schreck giving one ... the story was adapted again for Werner Herzog's Nosferatu the Vampyre, starring Klaus Kinski. He was then seen again ...
Robert Eggers’s deeply enriching “Nosferatu” (2024), a darker and more devastating retelling of Dracula in fierce longing and yearning. Eggers’s ...
"It is fear and fun. It is a scream of horror and a cry of delight. It is Nosferatu, the Vampyre." "It is fear and fun. It is a scream of horror and a cry of delight. It is Nosferatu, the Vampyre." ...
“It is about the mood and style of vampirism, about the terrible seductive pity of it all.” - Roger Ebert Werner Herzog’s only horror film is as rich with artistry and tragedy as his most ...
We hear the wilderness and it hears us.