The trailer for the new version of Nosferatu, with Bill Skarsgård in the lead role, shook social media this week. The remake of the horror classic, directed by Robert Eggers, features a great cast – Lily Rose-Depp, Nicholas Hoult, Emma Corrin, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, and Willem Dafoe – and promises to be one of the hits of 2024, 102 years after the original.
The German expressionist horror film, released in 1922, was directed by FW Murnau and tells the story of Nosferatu, Count Orlok, a frightening vampire who is nothing more than an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker‘s 1897 novel Dracula. Since the filmmakers were unable to obtain the rights to the novel, they made several changes to the story and characters to avoid legal issues. For example, Count Orlok was created as a replacement for Count Dracula. A fantasy film, about the behind-the-scenes of this story that suggested that actor Max Schreck was really a vampire and was curiously starring Willem Dafoe.

In both films, Count Orlok is portrayed as a grotesque and mysterious figure with a bald head, elongated fingers, pointed ears, and sharp teeth. His appearance was designed to evoke fear and discomfort, which is a significant departure from the more aristocratic and suave image of Dracula in Stoker’s novel.
The story follows Thomas Hutter, who travels to Orlok Castle to finalize a real estate transaction. Hutter soon realizes that Orlok is a vampire and must escape to save his wife, Ellen, and the town from Orlok’s deadly influence.
Nosferatu is considered a classic of early cinema and one of the most influential horror films ever made. He introduced many of the visual and thematic elements that would become the basis of the vampire genre, such as the famous scene in which his shadow is cast on the wall as he climbs a ladder, symbolizing the inescapable horror he brings with him. These iconic images continue to influence horror films to this day.
If it were up to Bram Stoker’s family, Nosferatu wouldn’t exist. They went to court to stop the screening and the Berlin court ruled that all copies of the film should be destroyed. Although the order was complied with in Germany, copies of the film had already reached the United States, where Dracula was in the public domain. And now, we will see the update in 2024.
It’s terrifying.
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