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{{short description|1922 silent film by F. W. Murnau}}
{{dablink|This article describes the 1922 silent film. For the 1979 remake, see ]. For other uses see ].}}
{{Redirect|Nosferatu the Vampire |the 1979 film|Nosferatu the Vampyre|the 2024 film| Nosferatu (2024 film)|other uses|Nosferatu (disambiguation)}}
{{Infobox_Film |
{{Unreliable sources|date=September 2024}}
name = Nosferatu |
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}}
image = Nosferatu_DVD_cover.jpg |
{{Infobox film
caption = ''Nosferatu'' DVD cover|
imdb_id = 0013442| | name = Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror
writer = ]<br>] (novel) | | image = Nosferatu poster (Albin Grau, 1922) 1.jpg
| alt =
starring = ]<br>]<br>]<br>] |
director = ] | | caption = German magazine ad
| director = ]<ref name="BrentonFilm">{{cite web|url=https://www.brentonfilm.com/articles/nosferatu-history-and-home-video-guide|title=Nosferatu: History and Home Video Guide|website=Brenton Film|date=18 November 2015 }}</ref>
producer = ]<br>] |
distributor = | | producer = {{plainlist|
* Enrico Dieckmann
released = ], ] |
* ]
runtime = 94 min |
language = Silent |
budget = |
}} }}
| screenplay = ]
'''''Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens''''' ("A Symphony of (the) Horror" in ]) is a ] film shot in ] by ]. He had wanted to film a version of ]'s '']'', but his studio was unable to obtain the rights to the story. Murnau decided to film his own version and made only slight changes to the story. The resultant movie has many similarities to Stoker's original tale. "Dracula" became "Nosferatu" and the names of the characters changed, with ] changed to ]. The role of the ] was played by ]. Other major actors in the film were ] (as Hutter/Jonathan Harker), ] (as Ellen/Mina), and ] (as Knock/Renfield).
| based_on = {{based on|'']''|]}}
| starring = {{plainlist|
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
}}
| music = ] (1922 premiere)<ref name=BrentonFilm/>
| cinematography = {{plainlist|
* ]
* ] (uncredited)
}}
| studio = Prana Film
| distributor = Film Arts Guild
| released = {{film date|df=yes|1922|3|4|Germany}}<ref name="BrentonFilm 1920s Screenings">{{cite web |url=https://www.brentonfilm.com/articles/nosferatu-history-and-home-video-guide-part-2 |title=''Nosferatu'': History and Home Video Guide, Part 2: 1920s Screenings |website=Brenton Film |date=30 November 2016 }}</ref>
| runtime = 63–94 minutes, depending on version and transfer speed<ref name=BrentonFilm/>
| country = Germany
| language = {{plainlist|
* ]
* German ]
}}
}}
'''''Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror''''' ({{langx|de|Nosferatu – Eine Symphonie des Grauens}}) is a 1922 ] ] ] directed by ] from a screenplay by ]. It stars ] as ], a ] who preys on the wife (]) of his ] (]) and brings the plague to their town.


''Nosferatu'' was produced by Prana Film and is an unauthorized adaptation of ]'s 1897 novel '']''. Various names and other details were changed from the novel, including ] being renamed ]. Although those changes are often represented as a defense against ] accusations,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.thevintagenews.com/2017/04/05/all-copies-of-the-cult-classic-nosferatu-were-ordered-to-be-destroyed-after-bram-stokers-widow-had-sued-the-makers-of-the-film-for-copyright-infringement/ |title=All copies of the cult classic ''Nosferatu'' were ordered to be destroyed |date=5 April 2017 }}</ref> the original German ] acknowledged ''Dracula'' as the source. Film historian David Kalat states in his commentary track that since the film was "a low-budget film made by Germans for German audiences... setting it in Germany with German-named characters makes the story more tangible and immediate for German-speaking viewers".<ref name=":0">{{Cite AV media |title=Nosferatu |last=Kalat |first=David |type=Blu-ray audio commentary to the film |publisher=Eureka Entertainment |year=2013 }}</ref>
==Story==


Even with several details altered, ] sued over the adaptation's copyright violation, and a court ruling ordered all copies of the film to be ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Keatley |first=Avery |date=March 15, 2022 |title=Try as she might, Bram Stoker's widow couldn't kill 'Nosferatu' |url=https://www.npr.org/2022/03/15/1086605684/try-as-she-might-bram-stokers-widow-couldnt-kill-nosferatu |website=NPR |access-date=January 5, 2025}}</ref> However, several prints of ''Nosferatu'' survived,<ref name=BrentonFilm/> and the film came to be regarded as an influential masterpiece of cinema and the horror genre.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.empireonline.com/features/100-greatest-world-cinema-films/default.asp?film=21 |title=The 100 Best Films of World Cinema |access-date=2 December 2016 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.film.com/movies/whats-the-big-deal-nosferatu-1922#fbid=cLMo8e-acRk |title=What's the Big Deal?: ''Nosferatu'' (1922) (archived October 13, 2011) |access-date=2 December 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111013085354/http://www.film.com/movies/whats-the-big-deal-nosferatu-1922#fbid=cLMo8e-acRk |archive-date=13 October 2011 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Critic and historian ] declared it as a film that set the template for the genre of horror film.{{sfn|Marriott|Newman|2018|p=20}}
Count Orlok's move to Bremen brings the plague traceable to his dealings with the realtor Thomas Hutter, and the Count's obsession with Hutter's wife, Ellen the only one with the power to end the evil.

==Plot==
<!-- keep between 400 to 700 words per MOS:FILMPLOT. -->

In 1838, in the fictional German town of Wisborg,<ref name=BrentonFilm/><ref>{{cite book|last1=Klinowski|first1=Jacek|last2=Garbicz|first2=Adam|title=Feature Cinema in the 20th Century: Volume One: 1913–1950: a Comprehensive Guide|date=2012|publisher=Planet RGB Limited|page=1920|isbn=9781624075643|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lpp93FevM2cC&pg=PA1920-IA11|access-date=18 August 2017}}</ref> ] is sent to ] by his employer, the eccentric estate agent Herr Knock, to visit a new client, ], who is planning on buying a house across from Hutter's own residence. As Hutter studies the route on a map, Knock secretly studies a mysterious correspondence in ] symbols. While embarking on his journey, Hutter stops at an inn in which the locals are terrified by the mere mention of Orlok's name. In his room, he finds a book about ]s, which he initially scoffs at but puts in his baggage..

After his carriage refuses to take him further than the entrance to the mountain pass, Hutter travels on foot until after sunset, when he is met on the road by a coach and rides to Orlok's castle in the ], where he is welcomed by Orlok himself. While Hutter is eating supper, he accidentally cuts his thumb; Orlok tries to suck the blood out, but his repulsed guest pulls his hand away. Hutter wakes up the next morning to find fresh punctures on his neck, which he attributes to mosquitoes. That night, Orlok signs the documents to purchase the house and notices on the table a miniature portrait of Hutter's wife, Ellen, an image that the young man carries with him in a small circular frame. Admiring the portrait, the count remarks that she has a "lovely neck."
] as ] in ''Nosferatu – Eine Symphonie des Grauens'' (1922)]]
Reading the book that he took from the inn, Hutter begins to suspect that Orlok is indeed a vampire. With no way to bar the door to his bedroom, Hutter desperately tries to hide as midnight approaches. Suddenly, the door begins to slowly open by itself and, as Orlok enters, a terrified Hutter hides under the bedcovers and falls unconscious. Meanwhile, back in Wisborg, Ellen arises from her own bed and ] to the railing of her bedroom's balcony. She starts walking on top of the railing, which gets the attention of Thomas' friend Harding in the adjacent room. When the doctor arrives, Ellen envisions Orlok in his castle threatening her unconscious husband and shouts Hutter's name, which somehow Orlok is able to hear, causing him to withdraw.

On the next day, Hutter explores the castle. In a vault, he finds the coffin in which Orlok is resting dormant in the crypt and flees back to his room. Hours later, as Hutter watches, Orlok piles up coffins on a coach and climbs into the last one before the coach departs; Hutter manages to escape from the castle and rushes home. The coffins are taken aboard a ], where the sailors discover rats in the coffins. All of the crewmen later die, and Orlok takes control of the vessel. When the ship arrives in Wisborg, Orlok leaves unobserved, carrying one of his coffins, and moves into the house that he purchased.

Many deaths in the town follow Orlok's arrival, which the local doctors attribute to an unspecified plague caused by the rats from the ship. Knock, who has gone completely insane, is confined to the mental asylum, but escapes. Ellen reads the book that Hutter found; it claims that a vampire can be destroyed if a pure-hearted woman distracts the vampire from the approaching dawn with her beauty and by offering him her blood of her own free will; she decides to sacrifice herself. Knock is eventually re-captured and returned to the asylum. Ellen opens her window to invite Orlok in and pretends to fall ill so that she can send Hutter to fetch Professor Bulwer, a physician. After he leaves, Orlok enters and drinks her blood, but the sun rises, the rays of which causes Orlok to vanish in a puff of smoke, which Knock in his asylum cell senses and is shattered by. Ellen lives just long enough to be embraced by her grief-stricken husband.

The film's final image is that of Orlok's castle, destroyed.

==Cast==
] in a promotional still for the film]]
* ] as ], a Transylvanian noble and vampire. In the public domain version, he is referred to as ].
* ] as ], a young estate agent. In the public domain version, he is referred to as ].
* ] as Ellen, Hutter's wife. In the public domain version, she is referred to as ].
* ] as Harding, a wealthy shipowner and Hutter's friend. In the public domain version, he is referred to as ].
* ] as Ruth, Harding's sister. In the public domain version, she is referred to as ] and said to be his wife.
* ] as Professor Sievers, Wisborg's doctor. In the public domain version, he is referred to as the ].
* ] as Knock, an estate broker and Hutter's employer. In the public domain version, he is referred to as ].
* ] as Professor Bulwer, a physician. In the public domain version, he is referred to as ].
* ] as the ''Empusa'' captain. In the public domain version, he is referred to as the captain of the ''Demeter''.
* ] as the ''Empusa'' first mate
* {{ill|Albert Venohr|de}} as the ''Empusa'' sailor

Making uncredited appearances are ] as one of Bulwer's students, {{ill|Hardy von Francois|de}} as a doctor at a mental hospital, ] as an innkeeper, and ] as a hospital nurse.

==Themes==
===The Other===
''Nosferatu'' has been noted for its themes regarding fear of ], as well as for possible ] undertones,<ref name=BrentonFilm /> both of which may have been partially derived from the ] novel '']'', upon which the film was based.<ref name="Giesen 109">]</ref> The physical appearance of Count Orlok, with his hooked nose, long claw-like fingernails, and large bald head, has been compared to ] from the time in which ''Nosferatu'' was produced.<ref name="Giesen 108">]</ref> His features have also been compared to those of a rat or a mouse, the former of which Jews were often equated with.<ref name="Giesen 108–109">]</ref><ref name="Magistrale 25–26">]</ref> Orlok's interest in acquiring property in the German town of Wisborg, a shift in locale from the Stoker novel's ], has also been analyzed as preying on the fears and anxieties of the German public at the time.<ref name="Magistrale 25">]</ref> Professor ] wrote that the film's depiction of an "invasion of the ] by an outside force poses disquieting parallels to the anti-Semitic atmosphere festering in ] in 1922."<ref name="Magistrale 25" />

When the foreign Orlok arrives in Wisborg by ship, he brings with him a swarm of rats which, in a deviation from the source novel, spread the ] throughout the town.<ref name="Magistrale 25–26" /><ref name="Joslin 15">]</ref> This plot element further associates Orlok with rodents and the idea of the "Jew as disease-causing agent".<ref name="Giesen 108" /><ref name="Magistrale 25–26" /> It is also notable that Orlok's accomplice in conspiracy Knock is a Jewish realtor, who acts as the vampire's ] in the ] town of Wisborg.<ref>''Golem, Caligari, Nosferatu – A Chronicle of German Film Fantasy'' (2022) by Rolf Giesen</ref> There were other views – writer ] has noted that director ] "was friendly with and protective of a number of Jewish men and women" throughout his life, including Jewish actor ], who plays Knock in ''Nosferatu''.<ref name="Jackson 20">]</ref> Additionally, Magistrale wrote that Murnau, being a ], would have been "presumably more sensitive to the persecution of a subgroup inside the larger German society".<ref name="Magistrale 25–26" /> As such, it has been said that perceived associations between Orlok and antisemitic stereotypes are unlikely to have been conscious decisions on the part of Murnau.<ref name="Magistrale 25–26" /><ref name="Jackson 20" />

===Occultism===
]
Murnau and Grau gave Orlok in the film a demonic lineage and an occult origin: Orlok is the creation of ], one of the Satanic ]s. Belial in ] 41:8–10 is also associated with pestilence, with Orlok in film being a manifestation of contagion, rats pouring out of his coffins onto the streets of Wisborg, spreading ]. Orlok's link to Belial is also significant because Belial is "one of the demons traditionally summoned by ] magicians" – making Orlok someone who practiced ] before becoming a vampire.<ref name="annwnjones">Annwn Jones, David (2023), ''Vampires on the Silent Screen: Cinema’s First Age of Vampires 1897–1922'', pp. 169, 184</ref>

Orlok and his servant Knock are communicating in occult language – the documents between Orlok and Knock are written in ], a constructed language said to be that of the angels, which was recorded in the private journals of English occultist ] and his colleague English ] ] in late 16th-century ] England.<ref name="annwnjones"/><ref name="Movie Magick 2018 p. 52">''Movie Magick: The Occult in Film'' (2018) by David Huckvale, p. 52</ref>

The character of Professor Bulwer in the film is named in reference to English occult novelist ].<ref name="Movie Magick 2018 p. 52"/> The idea of astral entities, arising from the dark thoughts of human beings, responsible for epidemics that call for blood sacrifices in order to prevent them, is also closely linked to that of the alchemist ], whose figure is partly embodied in the film in the character of Professor Bulwer (who is mentioned in the film to be ] himself). This is made concrete in the film in the plague epidemic that spreads through the city of Wisborg, which cannot be remedied by scientific methods, but by the blood sacrifice of a woman, thus destroying forever the dark being responsible for this catastrophic situation.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://elhype.com/en/nosferatu-esotericism-and-terror/ |title='Nosferatu': A Century of Esotericism and Terror |date=30 October 2022 }}</ref>

===World War I===

The idea for making this vampire film saw its genesis in the war-time experience of producer Albin Grau. Grau served in the German army during ] on the ]. While in Serbia, Grau encountered a local farmer who told him of his father, who the farmer believed had become an undead vampire. F. W. Murnau, director of the film, also saw considerable action in World War I – not only as a company commander in the trenches of the ], but also later in the air after he transferred to the ]. He survived at least eight crashes. ] who portrayed Count Orlok also served in the trenches with the German army. Little is known of his war-time experience, but there are some signs he may have dealt with some form of ]. Colleagues commented that he preferred to keep to himself. He was known to take long walks in the forest alone, oftentimes disappearing for hours at a time. He once stated that he lived in "a remote and incorporeal world". Thus it is considered that the turmoil of 1920s Germany and the war-time experiences of those who produced the film left their marks on the production of the film.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://alexanderandsonsrestorations.com/vampires-great-war/ |title=Of Vampires and the Great War |date=30 October 2014 |access-date=2 January 2024 |archive-date=12 December 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231212104436/https://alexanderandsonsrestorations.com/vampires-great-war/ |url-status=dead }}</ref>

As ], a dedicated occultist, wrote: "Mysticism and magic, the dark forces to which Germans have always been more than willing to commit themselves, had flourished in the face of death on the battlefields" – these forces were intrinsic to the shaping of cinema's first vampires. Albin Grau himself also linked the war and vampires: "this monstrous ] that is unleashed across the earth like a cosmic vampire to drink the blood of millions and millions of men". Belial as well is the link between war and contagion, as Orlok is linked directly to the Black Death and many critics have linked ''Nosferatu''{{'}}s disease-bearing rodents to the transmissible sickness associated with ] in which rats flourished. As noted by ] in his psychoanalytic study of nightmares, vampire legends proliferate in periods of mass contagion.<ref>{{cite book |title=Vampires on the Silent Screen: Cinema’s First Age of Vampires 1897–1922 |date=2023 |author=David Annwn Jones |pages=169, 183 }}</ref>


==Production== ==Production==
]


The studio behind ''Nosferatu'', Prana Film, was a short-lived ]-era German ] founded in 1921 by Enrico Dieckmann and occultist artist ],<ref name=BrentonFilm/> named after a ] journal which was itself named for the ] concept of {{lang|sa-Latn|]}}.<ref name=":0" /> Although the studio's intent was to produce ]- and ]-themed films, ''Nosferatu'' was its only production,<ref>{{cite journal|last=Elsaesser|first=Thomas|title=Six Degrees Of Nosferatu|journal=Sight and Sound|date=February 2001|url=http://old.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/feature/92|access-date=31 May 2013|issn=0037-4806|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131210223826/http://old.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/feature/92|archive-date=10 December 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref> as it declared ] shortly after the film's release.
Stylistically, ''Nosferatu'' is similar to ''Dracula'', although the first official version of the story would not be made until ]. Nosferatu leaves the core characters (John and Mina Harker, the Count, Dr. Seward, etc.) but weeds out many of the secondary players, such as Lucy. All the characters' names were changed as well, although in some versions of this film the ''Dracula'' names have been reinserted.


{{multiple image
{{spoiler}}
| align = right
The ending is also substantially different from that of ''Dracula''. Count Orlock (Dracula) is ultimately destroyed when the 'Mina' character sacrifices herself to him. In the book (and many later versions of the story) Dracula is destroyed physically. The timeframe of the story is also set back significantly: according to the logbook of the ship captain, it takes place in ], while ''Dracula'' takes place in the ].
| total_width = 300
{{endspoiler}}
| image1 = Nosferatu poster (Albin Grau, 1922) 3.jpg
| image2 = Nosferatu poster (Albin Grau, 1922) 2.png
| footer = Original promotional art by ]
}}
Grau claimed he was inspired to shoot a vampire film by a war experience: in Grau's ]l tale, during the winter of 1916, a ] farmer told him that his father was a vampire and one of the ].<ref>{{citation |first=Christiane |last=Mückenberger |editor1-first=Günther |editor1-last=Dahlke |editor2-first=Günter |editor2-last=Karl |chapter=Nosferatu |title=Deutsche Spielfilme von den Anfängen bis 1933 |publisher=Henschel Verlag |location=Berlin |date=1993 |isbn=3-89487-009-5 |page=71 |language=de}}</ref> As a lifelong student of the occult and member of {{lang|la|]}}, under the magical name of Master Pacitius, Grau was able to imbue Nosferatu with ] and mystical undertones. One example in particular was the cryptic contract that Count Orlok and Knock exchanged, which was filled in ], hermetic and ] symbols. Grau was also a strong influence on Orlok's verminous and emaciated look<ref>Tobias Churton. ''The Beast in Berlin: Art, Sex and Magick in the Weimar Republic''. Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions,2014, p. 68</ref> and he also designed the film's sets, costumes, make-up and the letter with the Enochian symbols. He also was responsible for film's advertising campaign, creating movie posters and advertisements. Grau's visual style was also deeply influenced by work of the artist Hugo Steiner-Prag who had illustrated other texts with esoteric subjects, such as ]’s '']'' and ]’s {{lang|de|]}} (1907).<ref name="Silent Screen 2023 p.184">''Vampires on the Silent Screen: Cinema’s First Age of Vampires 1897–1922'' (2023) by David Annwn Jones, p. 184</ref>


]. (1970 photograph)]]
===Influences===
This was the first film of the production company Prana-Film GmbH; it was also the last as they declared bankruptcy after Bram Stoker's estate&mdash;acting for his widow, ]&mdash;sued for ] (]) and won. The court ordered all existing prints of ''Nosferatu'' destroyed, but a number of copies of the film had already been distributed around the world. These prints were then copied over the years, resulting in ''Nosferatu'' gaining a reputation as one of the greatest movie adaptations of the vampire legend.


Diekmann and Grau gave ], a disciple of ], the task to write a screenplay inspired by the ''Dracula'' novel, although Prana Film had not obtained the ]. Galeen was an experienced specialist in ]; he had already worked on '']'' (1913), and the screenplay for '']'' (1920). Galeen set the story in the fictional north German harbour town of Wisborg. He changed the characters' names and added the idea of the vampire bringing the plague to Wisborg via rats on the ship. Galeen's ] screenplay was poetically rhythmic, without being so dismembered as other books influenced by ], such as those by ]. ] described Galeen's screenplay as "{{lang|de|voll Poesie, voll Rhythmus}}" ("full of poetry, full of rhythm").<ref name="Eisner67-27">]</ref><!-- to add: Dieckmann and Grau get director Murnau; Grau does art direction, sets and costume; music by Hans Erdmann; lead the unknown Max Schreck; other cast from actors schooled by Max Reinhardt ... -->
With the influence of producer and production designer, ], the film established one of two main lines of vampire depiction in movies. The "Nosferatu-type" is a living corpse with ] features (especially elongated ]s and ]s), associated with ]s and ], and neither charming nor erotic but totally repugnant. The victims usually die and are not turned into vampires themselves. The more common other line is the "Dracula-type" (established by ]'s version of Dracula and perpetuated by ]), a charming aristocrat adept at seduction and turning his victims into new vampires.


]|italic=no}} in ] served as the set for Orlok's house in Wisborg.]]
Parts of the film allegedly showing ] were filmed in ]. Nosferatu's castle, for instance, is ] in northern Slovakia, and other locations are in the ] and on the ] River around Strečno Castle.
]
Murnau's ''Nosferatu'' is in the ], and copies of the movie are widely available on video&mdash;usually as poorly transferred, faded, scratched video copies that are often scorned by enthusiasts. However, pristine ] of the film have also been made available, and are also readily accessible to the public.


Actor ] was offered the role of Count Orlok, having previously worked with Murnau, but had to decline for scheduling reasons. In the search for an alternative the choice finally fell on the then-still-unknown actor ].<ref>{{cite book |title=Conrad Veidt, Demon of the Silver Screen: His Life and Works in Context |date=2023 |author=Sabine Schwientek |page=63 }}</ref>
===Origins of the name===

{{mainarticle|Nosferatu (word)}}
Filming began in July 1921, with exterior ]s in ]. A ] from {{lang|de|Marienkirche|italic=no}}'s tower over Wismar marketplace with the {{ill|Wasserkunst Wismar|de}} served as the ] for the Wisborg scene. Other locations were the {{ill|Wismar Wassertor|de|Wassertor (Wismar)|lt=Wassertor}}, the {{lang|de|Heiligen-Geist-Kirche|italic=no}} yard and the harbour. In ], the abandoned {{lang|de|]|italic=no}} served as Nosferatu's new Wisborg house, the one of the churchyard of the {{lang|de|]|italic=no}} served as Hutter's, and down the {{lang|de|Depenau|italic=no}} a procession of coffin bearers bore ]s of supposed plague victims. Many scenes of Lübeck appear in the hunt for Knock, who ordered Hutter in the ''Yard of {{lang|de|Füchting|italic=unset}}'' to meet Count Orlok. Further exterior shots followed in ], ] and on ]. The exteriors of the film set in ] were actually shot on location in northern ], including the ], ], ], the ] River, and {{interlanguage link|Starý Castle|sk|Starý hrad (hrad)}}.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.pitt.edu/~votruba/sstopics/movieclips/slovakianosferatulocations.html |title=Nosferatu (1922) Slovak Locations |last=Votruba |first=Martin |work=Slovak Studies Program |publisher=University of Pittsburgh}}</ref> The team filmed interior shots at the ] in Berlin's ] locality and further exteriors in the ] Forest.<ref name=BrentonFilm />
The original meaning of the word ''nosferatu'' is difficult to determine. There is no doubt that it achieved popular currency through ]'s 1897 novel ], and Stoker identified his source for the term as the 19th-century British author and speaker ]. Gerard introduced the word into print in a book chapter ("Transylvanian Superstitions" - 1885) and in her travelogue ''the Land Beyond the Forest'' (1888) ("land beyond the forest" is literally what ] means in ]).

{{multiple image
| align = right
| total_width = 300
| image1 = Wismar, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern - Wassertor (Zeno Ansichtskarten).jpg
| image2 = Wismar, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern - Marktplatz (Zeno Ansichtskarten).jpg
| footer = The {{ill|Wismar Wassertor|de|Wassertor (Wismar)}} (left, 1907) and the {{ill|Wasserkunst Wismar|de|lt=Wismar Wasserkunst}} (right, {{Circa|1909}})
}}
]
For cost reasons, cameraman ] only had one camera available, and therefore there was only one original negative.<ref>]: Luciano Berriatúa and Camille Blot in section: {{lang|de|Zur Überlieferung der Filme}}. Then it was usual to use at least two cameras in parallel to maximize the number of copies for distribution. One negative would serve for local use and another for foreign distribution.</ref> The director followed Galeen's screenplay carefully, following handwritten instructions on camera positioning, lighting, and related matters.<ref name="Eisner67-27"/> Nevertheless, Murnau completely rewrote 12 pages of the script, as Galeen's text was missing from the director's working script. This concerned the last scene of the film, in which Ellen sacrifices herself and the vampire dies in the first rays of the sun.<ref>] Since vampires dying in daylight appears neither in Stoker's work nor in Galeen's script, this concept has been solely attributed to Murnau.</ref><ref>{{citation |author=Michael Koller |date=July 2000 |title=Nosferatu |url=http://archive.sensesofcinema.com/contents/cteq/00/8/nosferatu.html |work=Issue 8, July–Aug 2000 |publisher=Senses of Cinema |access-date=23 April 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090705132857/http://archive.sensesofcinema.com/contents/cteq/00/8/nosferatu.html |archive-date=5 July 2009}}</ref> Murnau prepared carefully; there were sketches that were to correspond exactly to each filmed scene, and he used a ] to control the pace of the acting.<ref>]</ref>

==Music==
The original score was composed by ] and performed by an orchestra at the film's Berlin premiere. However, most of the score has been lost, and what remains is only a partial adapted suite.<ref name=BrentonFilm/> Thus, throughout the history of ''Nosferatu'' screenings, many composers and musicians have written or improvised their own soundtrack to accompany the film. For example, ], composer of the soundtracks of many ] horror films in the late 1950s and 1960s, wrote a score for a reissue.<ref name=BrentonFilm/><ref>{{Cite journal |first=Randall D. |last=Larson |date=1996 |title=An Interview with James Bernard |journal=Soundtrack Magazine |volume=15 |issue=58 |url=http://www.runmovies.eu/?p=6789 |archive-date=14 January 2015 |access-date=25 March 2020 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20150114010054/http://www.runmovies.eu/?p=6789 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Bernard's score was released in 1997 by Silva Screen Records. A version of Erdmann's original score reconstructed by musicologists and composers Gillian Anderson and James Kessler was released in 1995 by ], with multiple missing sequences composed anew, in an attempt to match Erdmann's style. An earlier reconstruction by German composer Berndt Heller has many additions of unrelated classical works.<ref name=BrentonFilm/> In 1998, ] released a version on VHS of the film scored by songs from doom metal band ], which also featured an introduction with actor ]. In 2022, the New York Times wrote about Dutch composer ]'s new score and record release for ''Nosferatu''. Beginning with a solo played on the lute, his performance incorporates electric guitar and distorted recordings of extinct birds, graduating from subtlety to gothic horror. "My soundtrack goes from silence to noise over the course of 90 minutes," he said, culminating in "dense, slow death metal."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/24/movies/nosferatu-100-robert-eggers-remake.html |title=100 Years of 'Nosferatu,' the Vampire Movie That Won't Die |date=2022-03-24|website=]|publisher=}}</ref> A new score for full orchestra and piano was commissioned by the Louisville Orchestra from its former composer-in-residence Sebastian Chang. It premiered, playing live with the film, in October 2023.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://sebastianchang.com/nosferatu-new-film-score-world-premiere/|title=Nosferatu – new film score world premiere - Sebastian Chang|date=16 September 2023|website=sebastianchang.com}}</ref>

==Release==
]. (1900 postcard)]]Shortly before the premiere, an advertisement campaign was placed in issue #21 of the magazine ''{{lang|de|Bühne und Film}}'', with a summary, scene and work photographs, production reports, and essays, including a treatment on vampirism by ].<ref>]</ref> ''Nosferatu'' opened in the Netherlands on 16 February 1922 at the Hague Flora and Olympia cinemas.<ref>{{Cite news |date=February 16, 1922 |title=ADVERTENTIEN |pages=3 |work=]}}</ref> ''Nosferatu'' premiered in Germany on 4 March 1922 in the ''Marmorsaal'' of the ]. This was planned as a large society evening entitled ''{{lang|de|Das Fest des Nosferatu}}'' (Festival of Nosferatu), and guests were asked to arrive dressed in ] costume.<!-- a topic completely missing from the English wikipedia article --><!-- to add: prolog inspired by ]'s ] presented to musical accompaniment; Erdmann's "serenade" music and solo dancer from the state opera house; costume ball; prominent Berliners --> The German cinema premiere itself took place on 15 March 1922 at Berlin's {{lang|de|Primus-Palast}}.<ref name=BrentonFilm/>

The 1930s sound version ''Die zwölfte Stunde – Eine Nacht des Grauens'' (''The Twelfth Hour: A Night of Horror''), which is less commonly known, was a completely unauthorized and re-edited version of the film. It was released in ] on 16 May 1930 with sound-on-disc accompaniment and a recomposition of ]'s original score by Georg Fiebiger, a German production manager and composer of film music. It had an alternative ending lighter than the original and the characters were renamed again; Count Orlok's name was changed to Prince Wolkoff, Knock became Karsten, Hutter and Ellen became Kundberg and Margitta, and Annie was changed to Maria.<ref name=BrentonFilm/> This version, of which Murnau was unaware, contained many scenes filmed by Murnau but not previously released. It also contained additional footage not filmed by Murnau but by a cameraman, ], under the direction of {{ill|Waldemar Roger|de}} (also known as Waldemar Ronger),<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.filmportal.de/person/waldemar-ronger_3a62870302144e28b1c4503c95b7d46e|title=Waldemar Ronger|website=www.filmportal.de|access-date=18 December 2016}}</ref> supposedly also a film editor and lab chemist.{{Citation needed|date=December 2020}} The name of director F. W. Murnau is no longer mentioned in the credits.{{Citation needed|date=December 2020}} This version, lasting approximately 80 minutes, was presented on 5 June 1981 at the ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Reid |first1=Brent |title=Nosferatu: Chronicles from the Vaults |url=https://www.brentonfilm.com/nosferatu-chronicles-from-the-vaults |website=brentonfilm.com |date=2 December 2016 |access-date=23 October 2022}}</ref>

==Reception==
''Nosferatu'' brought Murnau into the public eye, especially when his film ''Der brennende Acker'' ('']'') was released a few days later. The press reported extensively on ''Nosferatu'' and its premiere. With the laudatory votes, there was also occasional criticism that the technical perfection and clarity of the images did not fit the horror theme. The ''Filmkurier'' of 6 March 1922 said that the vampire appeared too corporeal and brightly lit to appear genuinely scary. Hans Wollenberg described the film in ''photo-Stage'' No. 11 of 11 March 1922 as a "sensation" and praised Murnau's nature shots as "mood-creating elements."<ref>{{cite book |editor-first=Hans Helmut |editor-last=Prinzler |year=2003 |title=Murnau – Ein Melancholiker des Films |location=Berlin |publisher=Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek. Bertz |page=129 |isbn=3-929470-25-X}}</ref> In the ''Vossische Zeitung'' of 7 March 1922, ''Nosferatu'' was praised for its visual style.<ref>{{cite web |title=Nosferatu |url=http://www.filmhistoriker.de/films/nosferatu.htm |website=www.filmhistoriker.de |access-date=9 December 2018 |language=de |quote=Murnau, sein Bildlenker, stellt die Bildchen, sorglich durchgearbeitet, in sich abgeschlossen. Das Schloß des Entsetzens, das Haus des Nosferatu sind packende Leistungen. Ein Motiv-Museum. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181007145641/http://www.filmhistoriker.de/films/nosferatu.htm |archive-date=7 October 2018 |url-status=dead}}</ref>

''Nosferatu'' was also the first film to show a vampire dying from exposure to sunlight. Previous vampire novels such as ''Dracula'' had shown them being uncomfortable with sunlight, but not mortally susceptible.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Scivally |first1=Bruce |title=Dracula FAQ: All That's Left to Know About the Count from Transylvania |date=2015-09-01 |publisher=Hal Leonard Corporation |isbn=978-1-61713-636-8 |page=111 |language=en}}</ref>

]
The film has received overwhelmingly positive reviews. On ] website ], the film holds an approval rating of 97% based on 72 reviews, with an average rating of 9.05/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "One of the silent era's most influential masterpieces, ''Nosferatu''{{'}}s eerie, gothic feel – and a chilling performance from Max Schreck as the vampire – set the template for the horror films that followed."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/nosferatu/|title=Nosferatu, a Symphony of Horror (Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens) (Nosferatu the Vampire) (1922)|website=]|publisher=]|access-date=9 August 2019}}</ref> In 1995, the ] included ''Nosferatu'' on a ] that people should watch.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://decentfilms.com/articles/vaticanfilmlist|title=The Vatican Film List|website=Decent Films|publisher=SDQ reviews|access-date=14 August 2022}}</ref> It was ranked twenty-first in '']'' magazine's "The 100 Best Films of World Cinema" in 2010.<ref>{{cite web |title=The 100 Best Films of World Cinema: 21 Nosferatu |url=https://www.empireonline.com/features/100-greatest-world-cinema-films/default.asp?film=21 |work=Empire}}</ref>

In 1997, critic ] added ''Nosferatu'' to his list of '']'', writing:

{{blockquote|
Here is the story of Dracula before it was buried alive in clichés, jokes, TV skits, cartoons and more than 30 other films. The film is in awe of its material. It seems to really believe in vampires. ...Is Murnau's ''Nosferatu'' scary in the modern sense? Not for me. I admire it more for its artistry and ideas, its atmosphere and images, than for its ability to manipulate my emotions like a skillful modern horror film. It knows none of the later tricks of the trade, like ]. But ''Nosferatu'' remains effective: It doesn't scare us, but it haunts us.<ref>{{cite web|last=Ebert|first=Roger|author-link=Roger Ebert|title=Nosferatu Movie Review & Film Summary (1922)|url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-nosferatu-1922|date=28 September 1997|website=]|access-date=31 May 2013}}</ref>}}

==Home media and copyright status==
''Nosferatu'' only entered the ] worldwide by the end of 2019. Despite this, the film had already been subject to widespread circulation via a sped-up, unrestored black and white ] copy.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Reid |first=Brent |date=2018-06-07 |title=Nosferatu: History and Home Video Guide, Part 3 |url=https://www.brentonfilm.com/nosferatu-history-and-home-video-guide-part-3 |access-date=2023-10-23 |website=Brenton Film |language=en-GB}}</ref> Beginning in 1981, the film has had various different official restorations, several of which have been issued on home video in the U.S., Europe and Australia. These versions, which are all ], speed-corrected and have specially recorded scores, are separately copyrighted with respect to new copyrightable elements.<ref name="BrentonFilm" /> The most recent restoration, completed in 2005/2006, has been released on DVD and Blu-ray throughout the world, and features a reconstruction of Hans Erdmann's original score by Berndt Heller.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Reid |first=Brent |date=2018-06-07 |title=Nosferatu: History and Home Video Guide, Part 6 |url=https://www.brentonfilm.com/nosferatu-history-and-home-video-guide-part-6 |access-date=2023-10-23 |website=Brenton Film |language=en-GB}}</ref>


==Remakes== ==Remakes==
In 1977, Spanish amateur filmmaker José Ernesto Díaz Noriega added humorous and iconoclastic dialogues to the film. His adaptation or ], titled ''Manuscrito encontrato en Zarazwela or Nos fera tu la pugnete'', was based on a S8 mm print of the English version. "Observing the curious coincidence of the fiction that is related in the film with history",<ref>Cuesta, Xoán; Folgar; Xosé Mª (1983, abril-maio-xuño). "José Ernesto Díaz Noriega, cineasta". ''Grial'', Tomo XXI. Vigo: Galaxia, p. 152.</ref> Díaz Noriega adapted ''Nosferatu''<nowiki/>'s plot to the years of the ]: Prime Minister ] becomes Draculas Navarro and ] becomes Jonathan Carolus (prince of Franconia). The original Transylvania becomes Galitzia and the Pazo de Meirás becomes the vampire's castle. All Murnau's characters find equivalence in the political actors of the Spanish transition to democracy.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Piñuel |first=Enrique |date=March 23, 2019 |title=Los vampiros de la transición |url=https://www.elsaltodiario.com/cine/vampiros-transicion-jose-ernesto-diaz-noriega-nosferatu |website=El Salto}}</ref>
Remade in 1979 as ] as directed by ].


'']'', a 1979 remake of the film was directed and written by ] and starred ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allrovi.com/movies/movie/Nosferatu-the-Vampyr-v127854|title=Nosferatu the Vampyre|last=Erickson|first=Hal|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120717093933/http://www.allrovi.com/movies/movie/Nosferatu-the-Vampyr-v127854|url-status=dead|archive-date=17 July 2012|work=Allrovi|access-date=6 September 2011}}</ref> Although based on the 1922 film, the characters' names are faithful to Bram Stoker novel.
==Legacy==
*]&ndash; The narrative song "Nosferatu" closes the album '']'' by ].
*]&ndash; '']'' director Tobe Hooper chose a distinct Nosferatu look for the vampire Barlow.
*]&ndash; Clips from the film are included in British rock band ] (featuring David Bowie) '']'' video.
*]&ndash; The starship of ] in the '']'' episode titled "Dragonfire" is called ''Nosferatu''. Later Glitz acquires a ''Nosferatu II''.
*] U.K. based ] band ] is formed, heavily influenced by classic horror, vampires, and ] subculture.
*]-] &ndash; Various entries in the '']'' series of videogames feature a magic spell called "Nosferatu", which allows the caster to absorb the hit points of another unit.
*]&ndash; "Nosferatu Man" is the name of a song on the album '']'' by ].
*]&ndash; The vampire Radu from the '']'' series of films has visual cues from Nosferatu, including the grotesque white face, and over-long fingers and nails.
*] &ndash; In ]'s '']'' there exists a vampire clan of hideously deformed vampires known as the ].
*] &ndash; Millennium Publications releases a four-part comic series, '']'' written by ] with art by Rik Levins that provides an origin for Orlock separate and distinct from Dracula. The series also portrays his career after the events of the Murnau film.
*]&ndash; From Swedish doom metal band The 3rd and the Mortal, you hear mention of Nosferatu in the song "Salva Me", on their album "Tears Laid in Earth". The Lyrics of mention are: "Cold winds chant Nosferatu".
*]. The famous shadow scene is parodied in ] episode ] in the scene where ] welcomes the Simpsons to his castle.
*]&ndash; Clips from a ''Nosferatu'' re-make appear and he jumps off of the screen in an episode of '']'' called "The Tale of the Midnight Madness" (Season 2, Episode 2).
*]&ndash; Metal band ] referred to "a date at midnight with Nosferatu" in the lyrics to Black No. 1 (Little Miss Scare-All)
*]&ndash;The film ] used scenes from "Nosferatu" before, during and after two of the main characters made love.
*]-]&ndash; A spoof Nosferatu-type character appears in the British sketch-comedy program '']''. He is seen terrorising a young woman in bed, but he offers betting tips and says "Monster, Monster!"
*]- The popular slasher movie ] includes a character watching a scene from ''Nosferatu''. On an interesting note, that character is played by ], who also plays ].
*]&ndash; The video game '']'' featured an enemy named "Orlox" who resembles Orlock.
*] &ndash; ], the villain throughout the first season of '']'', was visually based on Nosferatu, having long nails, large bat-like ears, and a bald white head. In the '']'' episode "]" there is also a Nosferatu-looking vampire on board a submarine, though it is implied he is actually supposed to be Count Orlok. Also in the seventh and final season of Buffy, the protagonists fight a race of ubervampires called the ] who are also very reminiscent of Nosferatu.
*]&ndash; ] wrote a trilogy of ]s based on German expressionist film, the second of which was titled ''Batman: Nosferatu''. ]'s costume was remodeled to resemble Orlok's, but most of the plot came from an equally renown German expressionist film, '']''.
*] - The Swedish Progressive Metal band '']'' has a track on their 1999 album Solitude - Dominance - Tragedy appropriately entitled Nosferatu.
*] - The Detroit based horror rap group Samhein Witch Killaz release a song called "Nosferatu." As you may have guessed the song was, in fact, about the vampire Nosferatu itself.
*] - The videogame '']'' featured a mutated creature called Nosferatu as a boss in the game.
*]&ndash; A ] movie called '']'' told a fictional story of the making of the silent version of ''Nosferatu'', imagining that actor Max Schreck (]) was himself a vampire, and that director F. W. Murnau (]) was complicit in hiring the creature for the purposes of realism.
*]&ndash; Several episodes of '']'' feature the recurring villain ], a robot that feeds off of the energy of anything mechanical.
*] - In the vampire anime '']'' a member of the Iscariot Organization refers to the main character Alucard as "Nosferatu Alucard" in reference to his despicable demeanor and his occult supernatural powers which are far greater than any normal bitten vampire. As well Incognito, the Vampire towards the end of the series, are referred to as a "true Nosferatu".
*] - The music video to ]s second single, "Sumisu" is shot in the style of the movie and features Urlaub playing a character bearing strong resemblance to Count Orlok. (photo: )
*] - ] and The Malcontent Orchestra release the CD "Into the Land of Phantoms," selections from their acclaimed score to Nosferatu.
*]&ndash; Count Orlok also appears in an episode of '']'' in the episode titled "]."
*]&ndash; The movie '']'' introduces mutant vampires called Reapers that resemble Count Orlok.
*] - The video game '']'' (and its prequel) feature a character called a Nosferat, a general for the Undead Hordes.
*]- A energy weapon in the online multiplayer game Eve Online is called a Nosferatu, it steals energy from another ship and transfers it to your own (also called energy vampires)
*]- ] '''Nosferatu.com''' web site is launched featuring historical information on the ''Nosferatu'' and officially licensed Nosferatu merchandise
*]- In the issue 14 of the ], ] is drawn to look like Count Orlok.
*]-] plays the role of Count Olaf in ]. The likeness of Olaf appears to be modelled on a likeness of Nosferatu.
*]– ], a new '']'' villain, is based on various aspects of Nosferatu. Rob Coleman (one of the top VFX workers on '']'') when speaking about movements for the character is quoted as saying, "In fact, we talked about ] as well as classic vampire movies, including ''Nosferatu''."
*]–]- ], a ] mini-series seeing Count Dracula transported to Arthurian era Camelot and invading the lands, with many underling vampires resembling the rat-faced look of Orlok.
*]– The character Uta Refson (]) is introduced in the series ] (episode 31) at table 13 of a speed dating session, as a Vampirologist (not a Vampire mythologist) certified by Dartmill University (the certificate being 13 lines long), teacher of a course on the queer vampire in literature & film in a seminar called "Demon Desire" about the vampire as a lesbian predator, and as an appropriately overwhelming love interest for the core character of Alice Pieszecki (]). Uta Refson is shown to have a bony figure, very intense eyes, long sharp fangs and finger-nails, a casual avoidance of being seen in mirrors, exceptional stamina, a preference to only go out at night, an aversion to discussing religion and far greater strength than her body suggests.


A ] by director David Lee Fisher, starring ] as Count Orlok, premiered in November 2023 at the Emagine Theater in ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.candgnews.com/news/nosferatu-remake-premieres-in-novi-4013|title='Nosferatu' remake premieres in Novi|date=17 November 2023|work=C&G Newspaper|access-date=28 November 2023}}</ref> The film uses green screen to insert colorized backgrounds from the original film atop live-action, a process Fisher previously used for his remake '']'' (2005).<ref>{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/2016/film/news/doug-jones-nosferatu-remake-1201753137/|title=Doug Jones to Star in 'Nosferatu' Remake|date=13 April 2016|work=]|access-date=13 November 2016}}</ref><ref name="BrentonFilm" /> It was later released on ] via ] in September 2024 and on streaming though ] on 18 October 2024.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://bloody-disgusting.com/movie/3833987/nosferatu-a-symphony-of-horror-starring-doug-jones-as-count-orlok-releasing-this-month/|title='Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror' Starring Doug Jones as Count Orlok Releasing This Month|first=John|last=Squires|website=]|date=October 2, 2024|access-date=October 4, 2024}}</ref>
2006- In the movie Running Scared, a Nosferatu-type monster is in the background of the bathroom of the pedophiles' house.

In July 2015, ] was announced with ] writing and directing.<ref>{{cite news|last=Fleming|first=Mike Jr.|title=Studio 8 Sets ''Nosferatu'' Remake; ''The Witch''{{'}}s Robert Eggers to Write & Direct|url=https://deadline.com/2015/07/nosferatu-the-witch-robert-eggers-studio-8-1201486438/|date=28 July 2015|website=]|access-date=27 March 2019}}</ref> It was reported in September 2022 that Eggers' remake would be distributed by ], with ] set to star as Orlok and ] as Ellen Hutter. ], ], and ] also appear.<ref>{{cite web |last=Kroll|first=Justin|date=September 30, 2022|url=https://deadline.com/2022/09/bill-skarsgard-lily-rose-depp-robert-eggers-nosferatu-focus-1235131507/|title=Bill Skarsgard & Lily-Rose Depp To Star In 'Nosferatu', Robert Eggers' Follow-Up To 'Northman' For Focus|publisher=]|accessdate=October 1, 2022}}</ref> The film wrapped ] on 19 May 2023.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Squires |first=John |date=2023-05-30 |title=Filming on the Robert Eggers 'Nosferatu' Remake Has Reportedly Wrapped in Prague |url=https://bloody-disgusting.com/movie/3764003/filming-on-the-robert-eggers-nosferatu-remake-has-reportedly-wrapped-in-prague/ |access-date=2023-06-03 |website=Bloody Disgusting! |language=en-US}}</ref> The film's first teaser trailer was released on 24 June 2024, and the film itself later released on 25 December 2024.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Vito |first=Jo |date=2024-06-24 |title=Robert Eggers Offers First Look at Nosferatu in New Teaser Trailer: Watch |url=https://consequence.net/2024/06/bill-skarsgard-nosferatu-trailer-watch/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR3BXDp1PBdxadzu1CKKPgELyZVxByb3YDm7nV-KxPzizfQxtBfZ97HkKFA_aem_CcX0LXLs5fLUGg3_dv9hxg |access-date=2024-06-24 |website=Consequence |language=en-US}}</ref>

==See also==
{{Portal|1920s|Germany}}
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}}
Movie: Running Scared (2006)

movie director Wayne Kramer mentions this Nosferatu-looking monster in the making of documentary featured on the Running Scared DVD
==Bibliography==
* {{citation |last=Brill |first=Olaf |title=Film Nosferatu, Eine Symphonie des Grauens (GER 1922) |url=http://www.filmhistoriker.de/films/nosferatu.htm |language=de |access-date=11 June 2009 |ref=filmhistoriker.de |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090819140316/http://www.filmhistoriker.de/films/nosferatu.htm |archive-date=19 August 2009 |url-status=dead}} (1921-1922 reports and reviews)
* {{cite book |last=Eisner |first=Lotte H. |year=1967 |title=Murnau. Der Klassiker des deutschen Films |language=de |location=Velber/Hannover |publisher=Friedrich Verlag |ref=Eisner67}}
* {{cite book |last=Eisner |first=Lotte H. |editor1-last=Hoffmann |editor1-first=Hilmar |editor-link=Hilmar Hoffmann |editor2-first=Walter |editor2-last=Schobert |year=1980 |title=Die dämonische Leinwand |language=de |location=Frankfurt am Main |isbn=3-596-23660-6 |ref=Eisner80}}
* {{cite book |last=Giesen |first=Rolf |year=2019 |title=The Nosferatu Story: The Seminal Horror Film, Its Predecessors and Its Enduring Legacy |language=en |publisher=] |isbn=978-1476672984 |ref=Giesen}}
* {{cite book |last=Grafe |first=Frieda |editor-last=Patalas |editor-first=Enno |editor-link=Enno Patalas |year=2003 |title=Licht aus Berlin: Lang/Lubitsch/Murnau |language=de |location=Berlin |publisher=Verlag Brinkmann & Bose |isbn=978-3922660811 |ref=Grafe}}
* {{cite book |last=Jackson |first=Kevin |author-link=Kevin Jackson (writer) |year=2013 |title=Nosferatu eine Symphonie des Grauens |language=en |publisher=] |isbn=978-1844576500 |ref=Jackson}}
* {{cite book |last=Joslin |first=Lyndon W. |year=2017 |title=Count Dracula Goes to the Movies: Stoker's Novel Adapted |language=en |edition=3rd |publisher=] |isbn=978-1476669878 |ref=Joslin}}
* {{cite book |last=Magistrale |first=Tony |year=2005 |title=Abject Terrors: Surveying the Modern and Postmodern Horror Film |language=en |publisher=] |isbn=978-0820470566 |ref=Magistrale}}
* {{cite book|title=The Definitive Guide to Horror Movies|last1=Marriott|first1=James|last2=Newman|first2=Kim|author-link1=James Marriott (author)|author-link2=Kim Newman|year=2018|orig-year=1st pub. 2006|publisher=]|location=London|isbn=978-1-78739-139-0}}
* {{cite book |last1=Meßlinger |first1=Karin |last2=Thomas |first2=Vera |editor-last=Prinzler |editor-first=Hans Helmut |year=2003 |title=Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau: ein Melancholiker des Films |language=de |location=Berlin |publisher=Bertz Verlag GbR |isbn=3-929470-25-X |ref=Prinzler}}
* {{cite book|title=The Vanpire Film from Nosferatu to True blood|last1=Silver|first1=Alain|last2=Ursini|first2=James|author-link1=Alain Silver|author-link2=James Ursini|year=2010|orig-year=1st pub. 1984|publisher=Limelight Editions/Hal Leonard|location=Milwaukee, WI|isbn=978-0-87910-380-4}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Commons category}}
* at ]
{{wikisource}}
* (The largest single book ever on the great German film Nosferatu )
{{wikiquote}}
* ''Nosferatu'' from the ]
* {{IMDb title|0013442|Nosferatu}}
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* {{rottentomatoes|nosferatu|Nosferatu}}
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* {{TCMDb title|id=5893}}
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* * at Brenton Film
* {{Internet Archive film|id=Nosferatu_DVD_quality/nosferatu-1of5.mpg}}
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* at
* {{imdb title|id=0013442|title=Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens}}
* {{imdb title|id=0079641|title=Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht}}
* {{imdb title|id=0091651|title=Nosferatu a Venezia}}
* {{Movie-Tome|id=84091|title=Nosferatu}}
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{{Murnau}} {{Nosferatu}}
{{Dracula}} {{Dracula}}
{{F. W. Murnau}}
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Latest revision as of 18:49, 14 January 2025

1922 silent film by F. W. Murnau "Nosferatu the Vampire" redirects here. For the 1979 film, see Nosferatu the Vampyre. For the 2024 film, see Nosferatu (2024 film). For other uses, see Nosferatu (disambiguation).
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Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror
German magazine ad
Directed byF. W. Murnau
Screenplay byHenrik Galeen
Based onDracula
by Bram Stoker
Produced by
Starring
Cinematography
Music byHans Erdmann (1922 premiere)
Production
company
Prana Film
Distributed byFilm Arts Guild
Release date
  • 4 March 1922 (1922-03-04) (Germany)
Running time63–94 minutes, depending on version and transfer speed
CountryGermany
Languages

Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (German: Nosferatu – Eine Symphonie des Grauens) is a 1922 silent German Expressionist vampire film directed by F. W. Murnau from a screenplay by Henrik Galeen. It stars Max Schreck as Count Orlok, a vampire who preys on the wife (Greta Schröder) of his estate agent (Gustav von Wangenheim) and brings the plague to their town.

Nosferatu was produced by Prana Film and is an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula. Various names and other details were changed from the novel, including Count Dracula being renamed Count Orlok. Although those changes are often represented as a defense against copyright infringement accusations, the original German intertitles acknowledged Dracula as the source. Film historian David Kalat states in his commentary track that since the film was "a low-budget film made by Germans for German audiences... setting it in Germany with German-named characters makes the story more tangible and immediate for German-speaking viewers".

Even with several details altered, Stoker's widow sued over the adaptation's copyright violation, and a court ruling ordered all copies of the film to be destroyed. However, several prints of Nosferatu survived, and the film came to be regarded as an influential masterpiece of cinema and the horror genre. Critic and historian Kim Newman declared it as a film that set the template for the genre of horror film.

Plot

In 1838, in the fictional German town of Wisborg, Thomas Hutter is sent to Transylvania by his employer, the eccentric estate agent Herr Knock, to visit a new client, Count Orlok, who is planning on buying a house across from Hutter's own residence. As Hutter studies the route on a map, Knock secretly studies a mysterious correspondence in cabalistic symbols. While embarking on his journey, Hutter stops at an inn in which the locals are terrified by the mere mention of Orlok's name. In his room, he finds a book about vampires, which he initially scoffs at but puts in his baggage..

After his carriage refuses to take him further than the entrance to the mountain pass, Hutter travels on foot until after sunset, when he is met on the road by a coach and rides to Orlok's castle in the Carpathian Mountains, where he is welcomed by Orlok himself. While Hutter is eating supper, he accidentally cuts his thumb; Orlok tries to suck the blood out, but his repulsed guest pulls his hand away. Hutter wakes up the next morning to find fresh punctures on his neck, which he attributes to mosquitoes. That night, Orlok signs the documents to purchase the house and notices on the table a miniature portrait of Hutter's wife, Ellen, an image that the young man carries with him in a small circular frame. Admiring the portrait, the count remarks that she has a "lovely neck."

Max Schreck as Count Orlok in Nosferatu – Eine Symphonie des Grauens (1922)

Reading the book that he took from the inn, Hutter begins to suspect that Orlok is indeed a vampire. With no way to bar the door to his bedroom, Hutter desperately tries to hide as midnight approaches. Suddenly, the door begins to slowly open by itself and, as Orlok enters, a terrified Hutter hides under the bedcovers and falls unconscious. Meanwhile, back in Wisborg, Ellen arises from her own bed and sleepwalks to the railing of her bedroom's balcony. She starts walking on top of the railing, which gets the attention of Thomas' friend Harding in the adjacent room. When the doctor arrives, Ellen envisions Orlok in his castle threatening her unconscious husband and shouts Hutter's name, which somehow Orlok is able to hear, causing him to withdraw.

On the next day, Hutter explores the castle. In a vault, he finds the coffin in which Orlok is resting dormant in the crypt and flees back to his room. Hours later, as Hutter watches, Orlok piles up coffins on a coach and climbs into the last one before the coach departs; Hutter manages to escape from the castle and rushes home. The coffins are taken aboard a schooner, where the sailors discover rats in the coffins. All of the crewmen later die, and Orlok takes control of the vessel. When the ship arrives in Wisborg, Orlok leaves unobserved, carrying one of his coffins, and moves into the house that he purchased.

Many deaths in the town follow Orlok's arrival, which the local doctors attribute to an unspecified plague caused by the rats from the ship. Knock, who has gone completely insane, is confined to the mental asylum, but escapes. Ellen reads the book that Hutter found; it claims that a vampire can be destroyed if a pure-hearted woman distracts the vampire from the approaching dawn with her beauty and by offering him her blood of her own free will; she decides to sacrifice herself. Knock is eventually re-captured and returned to the asylum. Ellen opens her window to invite Orlok in and pretends to fall ill so that she can send Hutter to fetch Professor Bulwer, a physician. After he leaves, Orlok enters and drinks her blood, but the sun rises, the rays of which causes Orlok to vanish in a puff of smoke, which Knock in his asylum cell senses and is shattered by. Ellen lives just long enough to be embraced by her grief-stricken husband.

The film's final image is that of Orlok's castle, destroyed.

Cast

Max Schreck in a promotional still for the film

Making uncredited appearances are Karl Etlinger as one of Bulwer's students, Hardy von Francois [de] as a doctor at a mental hospital, Guido Herzfeld as an innkeeper, and Fanny Schreck as a hospital nurse.

Themes

The Other

Nosferatu has been noted for its themes regarding fear of the Other, as well as for possible antisemitic undertones, both of which may have been partially derived from the Bram Stoker novel Dracula, upon which the film was based. The physical appearance of Count Orlok, with his hooked nose, long claw-like fingernails, and large bald head, has been compared to stereotypical caricatures of Jewish people from the time in which Nosferatu was produced. His features have also been compared to those of a rat or a mouse, the former of which Jews were often equated with. Orlok's interest in acquiring property in the German town of Wisborg, a shift in locale from the Stoker novel's London, has also been analyzed as preying on the fears and anxieties of the German public at the time. Professor Tony Magistrale wrote that the film's depiction of an "invasion of the German homeland by an outside force poses disquieting parallels to the anti-Semitic atmosphere festering in Northern Europe in 1922."

When the foreign Orlok arrives in Wisborg by ship, he brings with him a swarm of rats which, in a deviation from the source novel, spread the plague throughout the town. This plot element further associates Orlok with rodents and the idea of the "Jew as disease-causing agent". It is also notable that Orlok's accomplice in conspiracy Knock is a Jewish realtor, who acts as the vampire's fifth column in the Biedermeier town of Wisborg. There were other views – writer Kevin Jackson has noted that director F. W. Murnau "was friendly with and protective of a number of Jewish men and women" throughout his life, including Jewish actor Alexander Granach, who plays Knock in Nosferatu. Additionally, Magistrale wrote that Murnau, being a homosexual, would have been "presumably more sensitive to the persecution of a subgroup inside the larger German society". As such, it has been said that perceived associations between Orlok and antisemitic stereotypes are unlikely to have been conscious decisions on the part of Murnau.

Occultism

A contract between Orlok and Knock

Murnau and Grau gave Orlok in the film a demonic lineage and an occult origin: Orlok is the creation of Belial, one of the Satanic archdemons. Belial in Psalm 41:8–10 is also associated with pestilence, with Orlok in film being a manifestation of contagion, rats pouring out of his coffins onto the streets of Wisborg, spreading Black Death. Orlok's link to Belial is also significant because Belial is "one of the demons traditionally summoned by Goetic magicians" – making Orlok someone who practiced dark sorcery before becoming a vampire.

Orlok and his servant Knock are communicating in occult language – the documents between Orlok and Knock are written in Enochian, a constructed language said to be that of the angels, which was recorded in the private journals of English occultist John Dee and his colleague English alchemist Edward Kelley in late 16th-century Elizabethan England.

The character of Professor Bulwer in the film is named in reference to English occult novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton. The idea of astral entities, arising from the dark thoughts of human beings, responsible for epidemics that call for blood sacrifices in order to prevent them, is also closely linked to that of the alchemist Paracelsus, whose figure is partly embodied in the film in the character of Professor Bulwer (who is mentioned in the film to be Paracelsian himself). This is made concrete in the film in the plague epidemic that spreads through the city of Wisborg, which cannot be remedied by scientific methods, but by the blood sacrifice of a woman, thus destroying forever the dark being responsible for this catastrophic situation.

World War I

The idea for making this vampire film saw its genesis in the war-time experience of producer Albin Grau. Grau served in the German army during World War I on the Serbian front. While in Serbia, Grau encountered a local farmer who told him of his father, who the farmer believed had become an undead vampire. F. W. Murnau, director of the film, also saw considerable action in World War I – not only as a company commander in the trenches of the Eastern Front, but also later in the air after he transferred to the German air service. He survived at least eight crashes. Max Schreck who portrayed Count Orlok also served in the trenches with the German army. Little is known of his war-time experience, but there are some signs he may have dealt with some form of post-traumatic stress disorder. Colleagues commented that he preferred to keep to himself. He was known to take long walks in the forest alone, oftentimes disappearing for hours at a time. He once stated that he lived in "a remote and incorporeal world". Thus it is considered that the turmoil of 1920s Germany and the war-time experiences of those who produced the film left their marks on the production of the film.

As Lotte Eisner, a dedicated occultist, wrote: "Mysticism and magic, the dark forces to which Germans have always been more than willing to commit themselves, had flourished in the face of death on the battlefields" – these forces were intrinsic to the shaping of cinema's first vampires. Albin Grau himself also linked the war and vampires: "this monstrous event that is unleashed across the earth like a cosmic vampire to drink the blood of millions and millions of men". Belial as well is the link between war and contagion, as Orlok is linked directly to the Black Death and many critics have linked Nosferatu's disease-bearing rodents to the transmissible sickness associated with trench warfare in which rats flourished. As noted by Ernest Jones in his psychoanalytic study of nightmares, vampire legends proliferate in periods of mass contagion.

Production

Prana Film logo

The studio behind Nosferatu, Prana Film, was a short-lived silent-era German film studio founded in 1921 by Enrico Dieckmann and occultist artist Albin Grau, named after a Theosophical journal which was itself named for the Hindu concept of prana. Although the studio's intent was to produce occult- and supernatural-themed films, Nosferatu was its only production, as it declared bankruptcy shortly after the film's release.

Original promotional art by Albin Grau

Grau claimed he was inspired to shoot a vampire film by a war experience: in Grau's apocryphal tale, during the winter of 1916, a Serbian farmer told him that his father was a vampire and one of the undead. As a lifelong student of the occult and member of Fraternitas Saturni, under the magical name of Master Pacitius, Grau was able to imbue Nosferatu with hermetic and mystical undertones. One example in particular was the cryptic contract that Count Orlok and Knock exchanged, which was filled in Enochian, hermetic and alchemical symbols. Grau was also a strong influence on Orlok's verminous and emaciated look and he also designed the film's sets, costumes, make-up and the letter with the Enochian symbols. He also was responsible for film's advertising campaign, creating movie posters and advertisements. Grau's visual style was also deeply influenced by work of the artist Hugo Steiner-Prag who had illustrated other texts with esoteric subjects, such as Gustav Meyrink’s Golem and E. T. A. Hoffmann’s Die Elixiere des Teufels (1907).

Hutter's departure from Wisborg was filmed in the yard of Heiligen-Geist-Kirche [de] in Wismar. (1970 photograph)

Diekmann and Grau gave Henrik Galeen, a disciple of Hanns Heinz Ewers, the task to write a screenplay inspired by the Dracula novel, although Prana Film had not obtained the film rights. Galeen was an experienced specialist in dark romanticism; he had already worked on The Student of Prague (1913), and the screenplay for The Golem: How He Came into the World (1920). Galeen set the story in the fictional north German harbour town of Wisborg. He changed the characters' names and added the idea of the vampire bringing the plague to Wisborg via rats on the ship. Galeen's Expressionist style screenplay was poetically rhythmic, without being so dismembered as other books influenced by literary Expressionism, such as those by Carl Mayer. Lotte Eisner described Galeen's screenplay as "voll Poesie, voll Rhythmus" ("full of poetry, full of rhythm").

The Salzspeicher in Lübeck served as the set for Orlok's house in Wisborg.

Actor Conrad Veidt was offered the role of Count Orlok, having previously worked with Murnau, but had to decline for scheduling reasons. In the search for an alternative the choice finally fell on the then-still-unknown actor Max Schreck.

Filming began in July 1921, with exterior shots in Wismar. A take from Marienkirche's tower over Wismar marketplace with the Wasserkunst Wismar [de] served as the establishing shot for the Wisborg scene. Other locations were the Wassertor [de], the Heiligen-Geist-Kirche yard and the harbour. In Lübeck, the abandoned Salzspeicher served as Nosferatu's new Wisborg house, the one of the churchyard of the Aegidienkirche served as Hutter's, and down the Depenau a procession of coffin bearers bore coffins of supposed plague victims. Many scenes of Lübeck appear in the hunt for Knock, who ordered Hutter in the Yard of Füchting to meet Count Orlok. Further exterior shots followed in Lauenburg, Rostock and on Sylt. The exteriors of the film set in Transylvania were actually shot on location in northern Slovakia, including the High Tatras, Vrátna dolina, Orava Castle, the Váh River, and Starý Castle [sk]. The team filmed interior shots at the JOFA studio in Berlin's Johannisthal locality and further exteriors in the Tegel Forest.

The Wismar Wassertor [de] (left, 1907) and the Wismar Wasserkunst [de] (right, c. 1909)
Starý hrad castle ruins as Orlok's dilapidated castle at the end of the film

For cost reasons, cameraman Fritz Arno Wagner only had one camera available, and therefore there was only one original negative. The director followed Galeen's screenplay carefully, following handwritten instructions on camera positioning, lighting, and related matters. Nevertheless, Murnau completely rewrote 12 pages of the script, as Galeen's text was missing from the director's working script. This concerned the last scene of the film, in which Ellen sacrifices herself and the vampire dies in the first rays of the sun. Murnau prepared carefully; there were sketches that were to correspond exactly to each filmed scene, and he used a metronome to control the pace of the acting.

Music

The original score was composed by Hans Erdmann and performed by an orchestra at the film's Berlin premiere. However, most of the score has been lost, and what remains is only a partial adapted suite. Thus, throughout the history of Nosferatu screenings, many composers and musicians have written or improvised their own soundtrack to accompany the film. For example, James Bernard, composer of the soundtracks of many Hammer horror films in the late 1950s and 1960s, wrote a score for a reissue. Bernard's score was released in 1997 by Silva Screen Records. A version of Erdmann's original score reconstructed by musicologists and composers Gillian Anderson and James Kessler was released in 1995 by BMG Classics, with multiple missing sequences composed anew, in an attempt to match Erdmann's style. An earlier reconstruction by German composer Berndt Heller has many additions of unrelated classical works. In 1998, Arrow Films released a version on VHS of the film scored by songs from doom metal band Type O Negative, which also featured an introduction with actor David Carradine. In 2022, the New York Times wrote about Dutch composer Jozef van Wissem's new score and record release for Nosferatu. Beginning with a solo played on the lute, his performance incorporates electric guitar and distorted recordings of extinct birds, graduating from subtlety to gothic horror. "My soundtrack goes from silence to noise over the course of 90 minutes," he said, culminating in "dense, slow death metal." A new score for full orchestra and piano was commissioned by the Louisville Orchestra from its former composer-in-residence Sebastian Chang. It premiered, playing live with the film, in October 2023.

Release

Nosferatu premiered at the Marmorsaal in the Berlin Zoological Garden. (1900 postcard)

Shortly before the premiere, an advertisement campaign was placed in issue #21 of the magazine Bühne und Film, with a summary, scene and work photographs, production reports, and essays, including a treatment on vampirism by Albin Grau. Nosferatu opened in the Netherlands on 16 February 1922 at the Hague Flora and Olympia cinemas. Nosferatu premiered in Germany on 4 March 1922 in the Marmorsaal of the Berlin Zoological Garden. This was planned as a large society evening entitled Das Fest des Nosferatu (Festival of Nosferatu), and guests were asked to arrive dressed in Biedermeier costume. The German cinema premiere itself took place on 15 March 1922 at Berlin's Primus-Palast.

The 1930s sound version Die zwölfte Stunde – Eine Nacht des Grauens (The Twelfth Hour: A Night of Horror), which is less commonly known, was a completely unauthorized and re-edited version of the film. It was released in Vienna, Austria on 16 May 1930 with sound-on-disc accompaniment and a recomposition of Hans Erdmann's original score by Georg Fiebiger, a German production manager and composer of film music. It had an alternative ending lighter than the original and the characters were renamed again; Count Orlok's name was changed to Prince Wolkoff, Knock became Karsten, Hutter and Ellen became Kundberg and Margitta, and Annie was changed to Maria. This version, of which Murnau was unaware, contained many scenes filmed by Murnau but not previously released. It also contained additional footage not filmed by Murnau but by a cameraman, Günther Krampf, under the direction of Waldemar Roger [de] (also known as Waldemar Ronger), supposedly also a film editor and lab chemist. The name of director F. W. Murnau is no longer mentioned in the credits. This version, lasting approximately 80 minutes, was presented on 5 June 1981 at the Cinémathèque Française.

Reception

Nosferatu brought Murnau into the public eye, especially when his film Der brennende Acker (The Burning Soil) was released a few days later. The press reported extensively on Nosferatu and its premiere. With the laudatory votes, there was also occasional criticism that the technical perfection and clarity of the images did not fit the horror theme. The Filmkurier of 6 March 1922 said that the vampire appeared too corporeal and brightly lit to appear genuinely scary. Hans Wollenberg described the film in photo-Stage No. 11 of 11 March 1922 as a "sensation" and praised Murnau's nature shots as "mood-creating elements." In the Vossische Zeitung of 7 March 1922, Nosferatu was praised for its visual style.

Nosferatu was also the first film to show a vampire dying from exposure to sunlight. Previous vampire novels such as Dracula had shown them being uncomfortable with sunlight, but not mortally susceptible.

An iconic shot of the shadow of Count Orlok ascending a staircase

The film has received overwhelmingly positive reviews. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 97% based on 72 reviews, with an average rating of 9.05/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "One of the silent era's most influential masterpieces, Nosferatu's eerie, gothic feel – and a chilling performance from Max Schreck as the vampire – set the template for the horror films that followed." In 1995, the Vatican included Nosferatu on a list of 45 important films that people should watch. It was ranked twenty-first in Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films of World Cinema" in 2010.

In 1997, critic Roger Ebert added Nosferatu to his list of The Great Movies, writing:

Here is the story of Dracula before it was buried alive in clichés, jokes, TV skits, cartoons and more than 30 other films. The film is in awe of its material. It seems to really believe in vampires. ...Is Murnau's Nosferatu scary in the modern sense? Not for me. I admire it more for its artistry and ideas, its atmosphere and images, than for its ability to manipulate my emotions like a skillful modern horror film. It knows none of the later tricks of the trade, like sudden threats that pop in from the side of the screen. But Nosferatu remains effective: It doesn't scare us, but it haunts us.

Home media and copyright status

Nosferatu only entered the public domain worldwide by the end of 2019. Despite this, the film had already been subject to widespread circulation via a sped-up, unrestored black and white bootleg copy. Beginning in 1981, the film has had various different official restorations, several of which have been issued on home video in the U.S., Europe and Australia. These versions, which are all tinted, speed-corrected and have specially recorded scores, are separately copyrighted with respect to new copyrightable elements. The most recent restoration, completed in 2005/2006, has been released on DVD and Blu-ray throughout the world, and features a reconstruction of Hans Erdmann's original score by Berndt Heller.

Remakes

In 1977, Spanish amateur filmmaker José Ernesto Díaz Noriega added humorous and iconoclastic dialogues to the film. His adaptation or détournement, titled Manuscrito encontrato en Zarazwela or Nos fera tu la pugnete, was based on a S8 mm print of the English version. "Observing the curious coincidence of the fiction that is related in the film with history", Díaz Noriega adapted Nosferatu's plot to the years of the Spanish transition to democracy: Prime Minister Arias Navarro becomes Draculas Navarro and Juan Carlos de Borbón becomes Jonathan Carolus (prince of Franconia). The original Transylvania becomes Galitzia and the Pazo de Meirás becomes the vampire's castle. All Murnau's characters find equivalence in the political actors of the Spanish transition to democracy.

Nosferatu the Vampyre, a 1979 remake of the film was directed and written by Werner Herzog and starred Klaus Kinski. Although based on the 1922 film, the characters' names are faithful to Bram Stoker novel.

A remake by director David Lee Fisher, starring Doug Jones as Count Orlok, premiered in November 2023 at the Emagine Theater in Novi, Michigan. The film uses green screen to insert colorized backgrounds from the original film atop live-action, a process Fisher previously used for his remake The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (2005). It was later released on video on demand via Amazon Prime Video in September 2024 and on streaming though Apple TV+ on 18 October 2024.

In July 2015, a remake was announced with Robert Eggers writing and directing. It was reported in September 2022 that Eggers' remake would be distributed by Focus Features, with Bill Skarsgård set to star as Orlok and Lily-Rose Depp as Ellen Hutter. Willem Dafoe, Nicholas Hoult, and Emma Corrin also appear. The film wrapped principal photography on 19 May 2023. The film's first teaser trailer was released on 24 June 2024, and the film itself later released on 25 December 2024.

See also

References

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  2. "Nosferatu: History and Home Video Guide, Part 2: 1920s Screenings". Brenton Film. 30 November 2016.
  3. "All copies of the cult classic Nosferatu were ordered to be destroyed". 5 April 2017.
  4. ^ Kalat, David (2013). Nosferatu (Blu-ray audio commentary to the film). Eureka Entertainment.
  5. Keatley, Avery (15 March 2022). "Try as she might, Bram Stoker's widow couldn't kill 'Nosferatu'". NPR. Retrieved 5 January 2025.
  6. "The 100 Best Films of World Cinema". Retrieved 2 December 2016.
  7. "What's the Big Deal?: Nosferatu (1922) (archived October 13, 2011)". Archived from the original on 13 October 2011. Retrieved 2 December 2016.
  8. Marriott & Newman 2018, p. 20.
  9. Klinowski, Jacek; Garbicz, Adam (2012). Feature Cinema in the 20th Century: Volume One: 1913–1950: a Comprehensive Guide. Planet RGB Limited. p. 1920. ISBN 9781624075643. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
  10. Giesen 2019 page 109
  11. ^ Giesen 2019 page 108
  12. Giesen 2019 pages 108–109
  13. ^ Magistrale 2005 page 25–26
  14. ^ Magistrale 2005 page 25
  15. Joslin 2017 page 15
  16. Golem, Caligari, Nosferatu – A Chronicle of German Film Fantasy (2022) by Rolf Giesen
  17. ^ Jackson 2013 page 20
  18. ^ Annwn Jones, David (2023), Vampires on the Silent Screen: Cinema’s First Age of Vampires 1897–1922, pp. 169, 184
  19. ^ Movie Magick: The Occult in Film (2018) by David Huckvale, p. 52
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  22. David Annwn Jones (2023). Vampires on the Silent Screen: Cinema’s First Age of Vampires 1897–1922. pp. 169, 183.
  23. Elsaesser, Thomas (February 2001). "Six Degrees Of Nosferatu". Sight and Sound. ISSN 0037-4806. Archived from the original on 10 December 2013. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
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  25. Tobias Churton. The Beast in Berlin: Art, Sex and Magick in the Weimar Republic. Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions,2014, p. 68
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  27. ^ Eisner 1967 page 27
  28. Sabine Schwientek (2023). Conrad Veidt, Demon of the Silver Screen: His Life and Works in Context. p. 63.
  29. Votruba, Martin. "Nosferatu (1922) Slovak Locations". Slovak Studies Program. University of Pittsburgh.
  30. Prinzler page 222: Luciano Berriatúa and Camille Blot in section: Zur Überlieferung der Filme. Then it was usual to use at least two cameras in parallel to maximize the number of copies for distribution. One negative would serve for local use and another for foreign distribution.
  31. Eisner 1967 page 28 Since vampires dying in daylight appears neither in Stoker's work nor in Galeen's script, this concept has been solely attributed to Murnau.
  32. Michael Koller (July 2000), "Nosferatu", Issue 8, July–Aug 2000, Senses of Cinema, archived from the original on 5 July 2009, retrieved 23 April 2009
  33. Grafe page 117
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  37. Eisner page 60
  38. "ADVERTENTIEN". Haagsche Courant. 16 February 1922. p. 3.
  39. "Waldemar Ronger". www.filmportal.de. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
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