Also, I know that this might be A LITTLE late but the new Nosferatu movie doesn't come out until Christmas so I think I'm GOOD. You can download FUTO Keyboard here btw: keyboard.futo.org/
I had the privilige to watch Nosferatu around Halloween in an old opera house, accompanied by a live orchestra as initially intended. Fantastic experience.
I had the same priviledge as early as in 1992, when Coppola's "Bram Stoker's Dracula" just had stirred a new interest in the granddaddy of all vampyre movies. The performance was in the "Weltkulturerbe Alte Hütte" in Völklingen, and there was even a mild form of rumbling at the box-office, because there were more interested people showing up than there were tickets sold, so the audience was packed with a full house. Unfortunately I cannot remember anymore, which score had been played. It wasn't the Erdmann score, that's for sure ! The composer was from Spain, that I still remember, and he conducted the orchestra himself.
it is important to note that there is a vampiric novella by the name of "Carmilla" written by Sheridan La Fanu that predates Stoker's "Dracula" by 25 years and inspired his gothic classic. its often overlooked but worth a read!
@@ThomasWake-k9j yea! that's the lore Carmilla was based upon. specifically Augustin Calmet's 1746 "The Phantom World" which compiled, outlined and put into print much of those ancient 11th century tales you're referring to. La Fanu had likely read the 1850 translation of Calmet's work which inspired his novella. folklore is like generational knowledge passed on and edited for centuries. super dope. also! love the profile pic and name, just saw the new Eggers film last night. was so sick.
Max Shreck was the scariest Klaus Kinski was the saddest William Defoe was my favorite ❤ Im curious to see how Bill Saarsgard will do in the new film Btw , all three of these films are available for free right now on UA-cam Nosferatu: A Symphony Of Horror (1922) Nosferatu : The Vampyre (1979) Shadow Of The Vampire (2000) So feel free to watch all three in order before u see the new movie in theaters ❤
@Nixus237 I've yet to see it unfortunately but I'm hoping it won't be disappointing because I've heard mostly good reviews which I expect from Eggers but I'm not going to say anything else until I see it for myself because critics & fans these days are too overrated but I do have high hopes & will keep u posted 💯
In 1920s Germany the actual experience of tyranny people had lived with was the authoritarian monarchy of the recently deposed Kaiser, who had led them into WW1, and of the stifling classism of the nobility. I think the fact that Orlok is a Count and also a monstrous parasite is extremely relevant thinking about how Germans of the time would read the film.
Very well put ! As a German I'd like to add an observation of mine, which, I guess, is also no coincidence. I think Orlok's black dress doesn't coincidentally looks quite similar to the soutane of a catholic priest of the times before Vaticanum II, with these two rows of knobs on the front side. So it seems to me that in the figure of Orlok are the two social classes combined, for which the common and utterly rightless people in Middle Europe, from the early middle ages on, until the fall of the monarchy in 1919, had to heavily fron and pay for: the aristocracy and the clerical prelates. As said, just a thought of mine !
Thank u for explaining the symbols on the contract ive been wondering about that for decades & the fact that a real occultist made that makes the original film even creepier
True, the mentioned antisemitic stereotypes surely existed at the time and long before. But somehow I cannot imagine, that spreading these stereotypes was an intention to make this movie, not at last because many contributors of the movie were actually jewish themselves. For example the author of the movie Henryk Galeen, who later emigrated to the USA, as well as the actors Ruth Landshoff, who played the small role of Harding's sister, and Alexander Granach (Knock). Other actors were jewish or partly jewish too: Gustav von Wangenheim (Hutter), Wolfgang Heinz (the sailor, who jumps in terror into the sea, when Orlok rises from his coffin) and John Gotwott (Prof.Bowler), who tragically was murdered by a nazi-thug in Poland in 1942 during WW2. I can't think of all of these jewish artists having agreed on participating in making an antisemitic movie..?! Makes absolutely no sense imho.
@@gunterangel A lot of European folklore and literature pre-WWII has antisemitic undertones. The witch wanting to eat Hansel and Gretel is based off Jewish ritual murder. There's a couple of Grimm fairy tales that are just plainly about Jews getting up to no good. Count Dracula, a demonic rich man from the East who is hurt by crosses and holy water is basically Harvey Weinstein if he was a vampire. As for the accusation of well-poisoning, well, Israel DID rig those pagers to blow up, so you tell me if that's implausible.
I know there's stuff out there, but if/when you do your Eggers Nossy review - I would LOVE some info about how his previous style matches or changes with the style seen in his latest film (Nossy).
There isn’t any evidence that Stoker knew muchabout Vlad III other than his name, as the entire book was written with a different name for the Count (originally Count Wampyr) and was changed before publishing.
I was about to say this! Coppola’s Dracula movie is what really popularized the idea that Dracula was based on Vlad Tepes but there’s little to suggest that in Stoker’s actual writing and (meticulously kept) journals. Always bothers me a bit to see that myth spread around.
LOL! From the reviews of Robert Eggers recent iteration of the story, he might have been inspired by Kinski's portrayal in "Vampire in Venice" along with the plot device of "the vampire and the heroine having a history together" -- a trope first introduced in 1974 in a made for TV version of "Dracula" produced by Dan Curtis and starring Jack Palance as the Count, and idea more famously revisited by Francis Ford Coppola in 1992 with his "Bram Stoker's Dracula" starring Gary Oldman in the titular role. So mix a little of the 'past history' theme of Curtis and Coppola along with the hypersexuality of Kinski, and you get Eggers ~ LOL!
I always say the same. Only Max Schreck was the one and only Graf Orlok/Nosferatu. When I see Klaus Kinski in this role, I just have to laugh. For me, it's more of a parody. Kinski with bat ears.
YES of course we want another R.E review! Your video on the Northman is what started my journey into becoming cinephile. Would also love your take on body horror, more specifically, The Substance.
Vald the impaler has nothing to do with Dracula, I'm sick of people thinking he is. Bram Stoker took Vlad's nickname and thought it sounded good that's it.
Incredible trick, getting others to view accusing you for something you've done as them just being bad. It's amazing that they pulled that one off, and fools just keep on falling for it today.
Nosferatu(1922), nosferatu the vampyre, shadow of the vampire, and now nosferatu 2024! It’s a blessing every single adaption of this take on Dracula are all phenomenal!
Great work - I learned a lot about both Mernau and Herzog’s films. And, great intro! 😁 I think it tops your recreation of (Lucy actress!) Adjani’s famous Possession scene. And count me in on a review of the Eggers film.
Thanks for mentioning Nosferatu in Venice. It's a very flawed film, but it has an interesting atmosphere due to the location, there's some very nice moody shots of Kinski wandering the city, and I like his look and performance.
If Letty were married to Thomas Hutter as depicted in the original I'd root for the Vampire... In fairness, film was so new at this point that most of the actors only had experience in stage performance. They had to exaggerate everything--so the people in the back of the house could see the performance as well as the front row. They had trouble comprehending that this wasn't necessary with a camera only a few feet away.
Shadow of the Vampire is one of the weirdest and most entertaining movie I’ve seen. The Herzog version is also a very odd movie. Watching it gives me this feeling of sadness and apprehension tinged with disgust.
RE: The charges of "anti-Semitism" in "Dracula" and subsequent films. When Bram Stoker first began writing the story it was tentatively titled "The Undead" At that time he had NOT YET discovered the travel log at the library at Whitby while vacationing there. Originally he envisioned his vampire (at this point, called "Count Wampyr" -- clearly a slug name until he could come up with something better) as a character resembling "Shylock" from Shakespeare's "The Merchant of Venice" a role which Stoker's employer the actor Sir Henry Irving was renowned for. So these hints of 'Anti-Semitism" must be blamed on Shakespeare, not Stoker.
I think there is a tendency among film critics and academia to view all German film pre-WW2 as either anti-Nazi or antisemitic. This is a simplistic way of viewing silent German cinema, which suggests that antisemitism was already a force that was foundational to German and wider European thinking before the rise of fascism. Films like Die Nibelungen by Fritz Lang for instance often get tarnished as being almost proto-nazi due to its dedication to the ‘German people’ at the beginning of the film. Any use of post-WW1 nationalistic themes or use of folkloric creatures is therefore, by these people, indicative of Nazism. This goes for Nosferatu. When viewed through a foreboding lense, anything could be interpreted as fascist or antisemitic.
I just watched that a hour ago actually 😂😂😂 Its my favorite of the Nosferatu films just because William Dafeo plays the best version to me & the movie is funny how John Malkavich character just treats the scariest vampire in cinema like he's his little bitch 😂😂😂
It's not that the budget was small. They had to film in the day because lighting techniques and film speed weren't developed enough to film ou doors at night in small German towns that didn't run electricity.
Cool breakdown. I think Eggers is a master but Herzog is a mad genius (perhaps the only personality that can bend Klaus Kinski to his will). Skarsgard's Orlock is definitely the most powerful and evil of the ones I've seen. But Herzog is the winner for me.
NOsferatu? Sounds more like YESsferatu to me! Do that review please. This is a really good video. Had a chance to watch the original movie this summer with live piano playing.
Weirdly there is another Nosferatu movie that appear on digital recently starring Doug Jones as Count Orlock. Count me in for a review of the Eggars film as well.
KREETINKS FROM TSCHERMANIE! On the political reading of the first "Nosferatu": Methinks that the political interpretation of the film as a "warning of future tyrannies and tyrants like the Nazis" is fudamentally flawed, upside down, in fact. Those critics always forget where the filmmakers, also where "German Expressionist Artist" in general, came from. They grew up in a tyranny, the WILHELMINIAN EMPIRE, reigned over by Wilhelm the II., who thought of himself as an absolute ruler with almost dictatorian powers, wore a moustache, loved to wear uniforms, had a strong military fetish, hated modern art and also democracy and looked down on the parliamentarian politicians. Also he had no scrupels to send milllions of people to their deaths to defeat the british and become Emperor of the world. Murnau and his coworkers were included in those millions. The point is: It is much more likely that Artist at the time as well as filmmakers were much more commenting on the past than predicting anything in the future. They were just then getting used to live in a republic with a true democracy and all that intailed.
Why didn't Hutter's wife turn into a vampire after she was bitten? Another GREAT portrayal of Dracula can be found in the movie Shadow of the Vampire with Willem Dafoe as the main vampiric character. Let's Hope that lik Dafoe, Demi Moore gets nominated for her work in The Substance. I mwas umnaware that you were goiing to Cite SOTV with Dafoe.
Love Letty. Cherish Letty. Protect Letty. Defend Letty. Be there for Letty. Be a shoulder to cry on for Letty. Compliment Letty. Cut pizza for Letty. Slice Garlic for Letty. Clean up after Letty. Play Yugioh with Letty.
Can anyone in '24 talk about anything without bringing anti-semitism in it? It's become very tiresome. I've seen Nosferatu a zillion times, never ever has this crossed my mind. I'm not picking on you, sir. Just making a statement. Good video.
that’s quite interesting to say, I’m not an avid nosferatu fan but rather one of the original 1897 Dracula novel, and that novel has very clear anti-semitic elements as well as more broad xenophobia. It’s quite well documented in academia and has been for a long time. I understand how it could get tiresome but this is a very real aspect of the book-I would’ve been wary if it had been left out of the video!
True, the mentioned antisemitic stereotypes surely existed at the time and long before. But somehow I cannot imagine, that spreading these stereotypes was an intention to make this movie, not at last because many contributors of the movie were actually jewish themselves. For example the author of the movie Henryk Galeen, who later emigrated to the USA, as well as the actors Ruth Landshoff, who played the small role of Harding's sister, and Alexander Granach (Knock). Other actors were jewish or partly jewish too: Gustav von Wangenheim (Hutter), Wolfgang Heinz (the sailor, who jumps in terror into the sea, when Orlok rises from his coffin) and John Gotwott (Prof.Bowler), who tragically was murdered by a nazi-thug in Poland in 1942 during WW2. I can't think of all of these jewish artists having agreed on participating in making an antisemitic movie..?! Makes absolutely no sense imho.
Also, I know that this might be A LITTLE late but the new Nosferatu movie doesn't come out until Christmas so I think I'm GOOD. You can download FUTO Keyboard here btw: keyboard.futo.org/
I had the privilige to watch Nosferatu around Halloween in an old opera house, accompanied by a live orchestra as initially intended. Fantastic experience.
so jealous rn
Where did you watchhh?
Where is this?? May I ask??
I had the same priviledge as early as in 1992, when Coppola's "Bram Stoker's Dracula" just had stirred a new interest in the granddaddy of all vampyre movies.
The performance was in the "Weltkulturerbe Alte Hütte" in Völklingen, and there was even a mild form of rumbling at the box-office, because there were more interested people showing up than there were tickets sold, so the audience was packed with a full house.
Unfortunately I cannot remember anymore, which score had been played.
It wasn't the Erdmann score, that's for sure !
The composer was from Spain, that I still remember, and he conducted the orchestra himself.
Wait what, in 1922
it is important to note that there is a vampiric novella by the name of "Carmilla" written by Sheridan La Fanu that predates Stoker's "Dracula" by 25 years and inspired his gothic classic. its often overlooked but worth a read!
Indeed! And has all the vampiric tropes that predate the others as well 🫰🏼
Tales of vampires go all the way back to 1047 AD in Russia
@@ThomasWake-k9j yea! that's the lore Carmilla was based upon. specifically Augustin Calmet's 1746 "The Phantom World" which compiled, outlined and put into print much of those ancient 11th century tales you're referring to.
La Fanu had likely read the 1850 translation of Calmet's work which inspired his novella. folklore is like generational knowledge passed on and edited for centuries. super dope.
also! love the profile pic and name, just saw the new Eggers film last night. was so sick.
You forgot "Varney the Vampire; or, the Feast of Blood" (1845)
@@SimonFoster23111971 And you forgot Lord Ruthven (The Vampyre, 1819).
Every Dracula is a vampire but not every vampire is a Dracula
So, what you're telling me is we have Draculas on the loose? - RLM best of the worst
All birds are dinosaurs but not all dinosaurs are birds
2:19 actually before Dracula was written, there was Carmilla, a book written in 1872 by author Sheridan Le Fanu, a whole 25 years before Dracula
Wow learn something new everyday
And "The Vampyre" by Polidori predates both, as it was published in 1819
And the "Family of the Vourdalak" by Tolstoy in 1839
The end is a dance of the dead. Like a surreal portrait.
Herzog makes it feel like a Grimm fairy tale.
Max Shreck was the scariest
Klaus Kinski was the saddest
William Defoe was my favorite ❤
Im curious to see how Bill Saarsgard will do in the new film
Btw , all three of these films are available for free right now on UA-cam
Nosferatu: A Symphony Of Horror (1922)
Nosferatu : The Vampyre (1979)
Shadow Of The Vampire (2000)
So feel free to watch all three in order before u see the new movie in theaters ❤
Now that the new one is out what did you think of Skarsgård
@Nixus237 I've yet to see it unfortunately but I'm hoping it won't be disappointing because I've heard mostly good reviews which I expect from Eggers but I'm not going to say anything else until I see it for myself because critics & fans these days are too overrated but I do have high hopes & will keep u posted 💯
@@MLawrence-z9k I won’t say anything to spoil the movie but Skarsgard was legitimately a terrifying presence in every scene he was in
Bill Skarsgard was the horniest!
Letty was born to be a star!
In 1920s Germany the actual experience of tyranny people had lived with was the authoritarian monarchy of the recently deposed Kaiser, who had led them into WW1, and of the stifling classism of the nobility. I think the fact that Orlok is a Count and also a monstrous parasite is extremely relevant thinking about how Germans of the time would read the film.
Very well put !
As a German I'd like to add an observation of mine, which, I guess, is also no coincidence.
I think Orlok's black dress doesn't coincidentally looks quite similar to the soutane of a catholic priest of the times before Vaticanum II, with these two rows of knobs on the front side.
So it seems to me that in the figure of Orlok are the two social classes combined, for which the common and utterly rightless people in Middle Europe, from the early middle ages on, until the fall of the monarchy in 1919, had to heavily fron and pay for: the aristocracy and the clerical prelates.
As said, just a thought of mine !
My observation is that you're probably a socialist making up whatever you want to see
The Dark History of Nosferatu = The Dark History of Klaus Kinski
Thank u for explaining the symbols on the contract ive been wondering about that for decades & the fact that a real occultist made that makes the original film even creepier
" . Schreck was not a vampyre. He was an actor,...THAT MIGHT BE WORSE !"
LOL 😄👍🏻
Letty nailed it
0:37 literally me
Great job, Benbow!
Nosforateau was just a sigma male that nobody could understand. He literally me
Legend
Orlock is basically the incel variant of Dracula 😂😂 that got me
one becomes desensitized to claims of antisemitism after the numerous (and often disingenuous) cries of such
True, the mentioned antisemitic stereotypes surely existed at the time and long before.
But somehow I cannot imagine, that spreading these stereotypes was an intention to make this movie, not at last because many contributors of the movie were actually jewish themselves.
For example the author of the movie Henryk Galeen, who later emigrated to the USA, as well as the actors Ruth Landshoff, who played the small role of Harding's sister, and Alexander Granach (Knock).
Other actors were jewish or partly jewish too: Gustav von Wangenheim (Hutter), Wolfgang Heinz (the sailor, who jumps in terror into the sea, when Orlok rises from his coffin) and John Gotwott (Prof.Bowler), who tragically was murdered by a nazi-thug in Poland in 1942 during WW2.
I can't think of all of these jewish artists having agreed on participating in making an antisemitic movie..?!
Makes absolutely no sense imho.
@@gunterangel A lot of European folklore and literature pre-WWII has antisemitic undertones. The witch wanting to eat Hansel and Gretel is based off Jewish ritual murder. There's a couple of Grimm fairy tales that are just plainly about Jews getting up to no good. Count Dracula, a demonic rich man from the East who is hurt by crosses and holy water is basically Harvey Weinstein if he was a vampire. As for the accusation of well-poisoning, well, Israel DID rig those pagers to blow up, so you tell me if that's implausible.
I know there's stuff out there, but if/when you do your Eggers Nossy review - I would LOVE some info about how his previous style matches or changes with the style seen in his latest film (Nossy).
Great video! Would love to hear your review of Nosferatu 2024 🎉 I loved it!
this film wasn't almost lost to time, it was almost lost to GREED
There isn’t any evidence that Stoker knew muchabout Vlad III other than his name, as the entire book was written with a different name for the Count (originally Count Wampyr) and was changed before publishing.
I was about to say this! Coppola’s Dracula movie is what really popularized the idea that Dracula was based on Vlad Tepes but there’s little to suggest that in Stoker’s actual writing and (meticulously kept) journals. Always bothers me a bit to see that myth spread around.
@ Especially since the slightest bit of research (Google: was dracula based on vlad tepes?) can disprove it for a video
Im just here for Letty and she was great! Letty W! ❤❤❤
LOL! From the reviews of Robert Eggers recent iteration of the story, he might have been inspired by Kinski's portrayal in "Vampire in Venice" along with the plot device of "the vampire and the heroine having a history together" -- a trope first introduced in 1974 in a made for TV version of "Dracula" produced by Dan Curtis and starring Jack Palance as the Count, and idea more famously revisited by Francis Ford Coppola in 1992 with his "Bram Stoker's Dracula" starring Gary Oldman in the titular role. So mix a little of the 'past history' theme of Curtis and Coppola along with the hypersexuality of Kinski, and you get Eggers ~ LOL!
I always say the same. Only Max Schreck was the one and only Graf Orlok/Nosferatu. When I see Klaus Kinski in this role, I just have to laugh. For me, it's more of a parody. Kinski with bat ears.
That ad at the beginning, it really was a real ad that really ran on TV in the 60s!!! The Red Scare was scaaaaawee.
YES of course we want another R.E review! Your video on the Northman is what started my journey into becoming cinephile. Would also love your take on body horror, more specifically, The Substance.
I would love a review from Eggers! Nice Vid as usual!
Vald the impaler has nothing to do with Dracula, I'm sick of people thinking he is. Bram Stoker took Vlad's nickname and thought it sounded good that's it.
Letty is the best!
Prāna = Edging
Why?
Incredible trick, getting others to view accusing you for something you've done as them just being bad. It's amazing that they pulled that one off, and fools just keep on falling for it today.
Nosferatu(1922), nosferatu the vampyre, shadow of the vampire, and now nosferatu 2024!
It’s a blessing every single adaption of this take on Dracula are all phenomenal!
Great work - I learned a lot about both Mernau and Herzog’s films. And, great intro! 😁 I think it tops your recreation of (Lucy actress!) Adjani’s famous Possession scene. And count me in on a review of the Eggers film.
This was outstanding. and Holy shit, Letty is great.
Thanks for mentioning Nosferatu in Venice. It's a very flawed film, but it has an interesting atmosphere due to the location, there's some very nice moody shots of Kinski wandering the city, and I like his look and performance.
This is an excellent educational video man, hope you’re doing well. Keep up the great work and take care!
The Herzog film ist #1
correct
No the original is still better but the remake is just more disturbing
If Letty were married to Thomas Hutter as depicted in the original I'd root for the Vampire...
In fairness, film was so new at this point that most of the actors only had experience in stage performance. They had to exaggerate everything--so the people in the back of the house could see the performance as well as the front row. They had trouble comprehending that this wasn't necessary with a camera only a few feet away.
Shadow of the Vampire is one of the weirdest and most entertaining movie I’ve seen. The Herzog version is also a very odd movie. Watching it gives me this feeling of sadness and apprehension tinged with disgust.
34:50
As an Italian myself, I swear to god that sounded even more hilarious
Actually seems Isabelle Adjani, (whom Kinsky clearly gropes on the deathbed scene) had no problem with him, as she states in Mein Liebster Feind
RE: The charges of "anti-Semitism" in "Dracula" and subsequent films. When Bram Stoker first began writing the story it was tentatively titled "The Undead" At that time he had NOT YET discovered the travel log at the library at Whitby while vacationing there. Originally he envisioned his vampire (at this point, called "Count Wampyr" -- clearly a slug name until he could come up with something better) as a character resembling "Shylock" from Shakespeare's "The Merchant of Venice" a role which Stoker's employer the actor Sir Henry Irving was renowned for. So these hints of 'Anti-Semitism" must be blamed on Shakespeare, not Stoker.
Am excited to see the new one after Christmas. The Northman The Lighthouse and Kinds of Kindness only new movies worth watching last cpl years
Excelent Job, new subscriber.
This video makes me want to see the movie even more
I think there is a tendency among film critics and academia to view all German film pre-WW2 as either anti-Nazi or antisemitic. This is a simplistic way of viewing silent German cinema, which suggests that antisemitism was already a force that was foundational to German and wider European thinking before the rise of fascism. Films like Die Nibelungen by Fritz Lang for instance often get tarnished as being almost proto-nazi due to its dedication to the ‘German people’ at the beginning of the film. Any use of post-WW1 nationalistic themes or use of folkloric creatures is therefore, by these people, indicative of Nazism. This goes for Nosferatu. When viewed through a foreboding lense, anything could be interpreted as fascist or antisemitic.
I’ve only seen Shadow of the Vampire. Which I thought for years was the original but just colorized.
I just watched that a hour ago actually 😂😂😂 Its my favorite of the Nosferatu films just because William Dafeo plays the best version to me & the movie is funny how John Malkavich character just treats the scariest vampire in cinema like he's his little bitch 😂😂😂
Letty chuds really reining in on this one
Would love to hear your thought on Eggers' Nosferatu when it comes out!
Vampires and piss witches. Very spooky indeed
Ayo it’s the piss witch, whachu wanna do b*tch
We do! We do want that video sir.
Good vid ✌🏽
Yes, please review Egger's Nosferatu!
REVIEW THE NEW ONE PLS
is the review still upcoming? saw it a few days ago and can't stop thinking it over
great job benbow
Bro when are you making the dekalog 10 video lol
Excellent vid 👍
It's not that the budget was small. They had to film in the day because lighting techniques and film speed weren't developed enough to film ou doors at night in small German towns that didn't run electricity.
I hope you do a follow up with the new movie and the connections
Cool breakdown. I think Eggers is a master but Herzog is a mad genius (perhaps the only personality that can bend Klaus Kinski to his will). Skarsgard's Orlock is definitely the most powerful and evil of the ones I've seen. But Herzog is the winner for me.
I’d nosferatu Letty too
Get in line, I claimed her with a Talmudic blood ritual first!
Shadow of the Vampire - EXCELLENT flick!
The vampire REALLY looks like/reminds me of Klaus Kinski imo. Werner Herzog’s ptsd from working with Klaus would likely kick in if he watches this 😆
13:48 oh come on, those are just the sudokus he solved during his morning coffee
23:15 but it’s not the same director is it?
Subscribing for your take on the new Nosferatu film
NOsferatu? Sounds more like YESsferatu to me!
Do that review please.
This is a really good video.
Had a chance to watch the original movie this summer with live piano playing.
Watch out for this guy. He's from Austin and to a less extent a vampire!
Letty W
Are u related to kino casino
😂😂😂
@ Is this channel related to Kino casino?
Weirdly there is another Nosferatu movie that appear on digital recently starring Doug Jones as Count Orlock.
Count me in for a review of the Eggars film as well.
KREETINKS FROM TSCHERMANIE!
On the political reading of the first "Nosferatu":
Methinks that the political interpretation of the film as a
"warning of future tyrannies and tyrants like the Nazis" is fudamentally flawed,
upside down, in fact.
Those critics always forget where the filmmakers, also where "German Expressionist Artist" in general, came from.
They grew up in a tyranny, the WILHELMINIAN EMPIRE, reigned over by Wilhelm the II.,
who thought of himself as an absolute ruler with almost dictatorian powers,
wore a moustache, loved to wear uniforms, had a strong military fetish, hated modern art and also democracy
and looked down on the parliamentarian politicians.
Also he had no scrupels to send milllions of people to their deaths to defeat the british and become
Emperor of the world.
Murnau and his coworkers were included in those millions.
The point is: It is much more likely that Artist at the time as well as filmmakers were much more
commenting on the past than predicting anything in the future.
They were just then getting used to live in a republic with a true democracy and all that intailed.
I prefer Herzog's take, ut the original scared me as a child.
Why didn't Hutter's wife turn into a vampire after she was bitten?
Another GREAT portrayal of Dracula can be found in the movie Shadow of the Vampire with Willem Dafoe as the main vampiric character.
Let's Hope that lik Dafoe, Demi Moore gets nominated for her work in The Substance.
I mwas umnaware that you were goiing to Cite SOTV with Dafoe.
Yes! Review please.
Eggerskino back on the menu. Please review it!
Was not expecting a fishtank crossover lmao
Love Letty. Cherish Letty. Protect Letty. Defend Letty. Be there for Letty. Be a shoulder to cry on for Letty. Compliment Letty.
Cut pizza for Letty. Slice Garlic for Letty. Clean up after Letty. Play Yugioh with Letty.
Silent cinema and Fishtank? My worlds are colliding…
What Does This Mean For Nosferatu Being A Literally Me Character
Hyped for Egger's Nosferatu, taking the whole family lol. Also Letty is a qt.
I love this movie.
LETTY WHAT ARE YOU DOING HERE
LETTY INVOLVED CINEMA IS SAVED
But what distinguishes an atheist from and a vampire, you may ask?
We stan bisexual vampires
Calling Nosferatu antisemitic for his appearance is incredibly antisemitic on a much deeper level
dracula did not start the vampire genre it was carmilla
Can anyone in '24 talk about anything without bringing anti-semitism in it? It's become very tiresome. I've seen Nosferatu a zillion times, never ever has this crossed my mind. I'm not picking on you, sir. Just making a statement. Good video.
that’s quite interesting to say, I’m not an avid nosferatu fan but rather one of the original 1897 Dracula novel, and that novel has very clear anti-semitic elements as well as more broad xenophobia. It’s quite well documented in academia and has been for a long time. I understand how it could get tiresome but this is a very real aspect of the book-I would’ve been wary if it had been left out of the video!
True, the mentioned antisemitic stereotypes surely existed at the time and long before.
But somehow I cannot imagine, that spreading these stereotypes was an intention to make this movie, not at last because many contributors of the movie were actually jewish themselves.
For example the author of the movie Henryk Galeen, who later emigrated to the USA, as well as the actors Ruth Landshoff, who played the small role of Harding's sister, and Alexander Granach (Knock).
Other actors were jewish or partly jewish too: Gustav von Wangenheim (Hutter), Wolfgang Heinz (the sailor, who jumps in terror into the sea, when Orlok rises from his coffin) and John Gotwott (Prof.Bowler), who tragically was murdered by a nazi-thug in Poland in 1942 during WW2.
I can't think of all of these jewish artists having agreed on participating in making an antisemitic movie..?!
Makes absolutely no sense imho.
Stoker's Dracula was an allegory at the time for the fear of venereal disease and immigrants. It's not complicated at all.
I know Nosferatu from the Granny games
We came to see letty
Wait, do you work on Fishtank
Good vampires, bad vampires, and bisexual vampires
Seven minutes in: “And now, the topic of the video.” Sorry, bud.
FIRST CHARLS, NOW LETTY????