Nosferatu is the latest reminder that Hollywood has never cracked the code on adapting Bram Stoker’s Dracula novel.
Robert Eggers' "Nosferatu" is very similar to Bram Stoker's classic "Dracula," but also differs in a number of ways.
Robert Eggers' 'Nosferatu' is a remake of an influential silent German film from 1922. How do the two movies differ?
Nosferatu was an unauthorized Dracula adaptation, but there's a reason Robert Eggers used Count Orlok instead of Drac when he ...
Focus Features' Nosferatu has taken in over $40 million since opening on Christmas Day, giving Robert Eggers his biggest ever ...
Even Bram Stoker had the sense to give Dracula a mustache in the book." Nosferatu ends with Orlok's death and, after being exposed to sunlight, he perishes atop Ellen Hutter. Of that, Eggers said ...
That includes director Robert Eggers, whose take on the fabled fanged villain is fueled with his signature penchant for ...
Full of chilling sequences and appropriately outsized performances, gothic horror feast immerses you in the creepy German ...
It’s hard to imagine why 5,000 live rats wouldn’t be enough for any film, but those who’ve seen Nosferatu surely know why that many rodents were necessary. Eggers’ dedication to ...
Robert Eggers' "Nosferatu" film remake makes some significant tweaks to the 1922 classic, turning to folklore and the ...
The book is written in epistolary format ... of how its adaptations have warped perceptions of them. The original Nosferatu, an unlicensed German film adaptation from director F.