I work at a high school in Southern Califirnia. One of my students started talking about a remake of Nosferatu coming along soon. I was pleased and surprised to hear of this 16 year olds interest in a classic, silent film. I'm watching it so we can bridge the age gap and have a common interest to talk about. BTW I'm 71.
I saw the new one, it’s absolutely brilliant. It feels like a classic, old-fashioned movie, and I mean that in the best way. It has so many beautiful shots and the acting was phenomenal. The actor playing Nosferatu/Count Orlok (Skarsgard) trained with an opera singer to make his voice as low as it was in the film.
This was the first edition of the movie I ever saw, with this music and the characters' names changed back to their novel counterparts. It's weird yet nostalgic.
Watched this with my brother because a random movie generator told us to and we only realized like 20 minutes in that this takes place in Bremen because it is a german movie... I'm german :'D
In the original 1922 presentation there was no mention of Count Dracula or any of the other characters from Bram Stoker's book. The film makers could not get permission to base it on the book, so they changed all the names, Count Dracula became Count Orlok and so on. Stoker's descendants later sued the film makers for copyright infringement and the court ordered all copies to be destroyed, but thankfully some survived. I've never seen a version where Nosferatu is called Count Dracula until now, did you change the names?
You are correct. After Murnau lost the lawsuit with the Stoker family, he was ordered to destroy all copies of the film. Luckily it had been distributed wide enough so that didn't happen. However, different versions do exist. This version does reference Stoker and Dracula but that was added not by us, most likely happening long before any of us were born, as we did try to find the earliest possible version we could, while also making sure the video quality was decent enough to be upscaled and was true to the original. I thought about redoing the opening titles to match the original exactly but decided against it as I don't think having it there detracts from the quality of the film that follows.
I work at a high school in Southern Califirnia. One of my students started talking about a remake of Nosferatu coming along soon. I was pleased and surprised to hear of this 16 year olds interest in a classic, silent film. I'm watching it so we can bridge the age gap and have a common interest to talk about. BTW I'm 71.
I saw the new one, it’s absolutely brilliant. It feels like a classic, old-fashioned movie, and I mean that in the best way. It has so many beautiful shots and the acting was phenomenal. The actor playing Nosferatu/Count Orlok (Skarsgard) trained with an opera singer to make his voice as low as it was in the film.
This was the first edition of the movie I ever saw, with this music and the characters' names changed back to their novel counterparts. It's weird yet nostalgic.
Then who was flickering the lights?
Lol
@brown22sugar25 Nosferatu (2024), Bill Skarsgard.
@@HaileysWorld2004Nosferatu (2024), Bill Skarsgard.
good thing i found an original audio of nosferatu. mostly they uploaded nosferatu with HD sound and i super hate it.
Watched this with my brother because a random movie generator told us to and we only realized like 20 minutes in that this takes place in Bremen because it is a german movie... I'm german :'D
@riri2495 Nosferatu (2024), Bill Skarsgard.
BELEZA! ! eu. tenho. o. DVD. desse. filme. 👍👍🇧🇷
Thank you for uploading, this is a masterpiece! I was laughing hard when I saw that "werewolf", so cute! 😀
Our pleasure!
@Annax434 Nosferatu (2024), Bill Skarsgard.
Max Schreck... What a fitting name.
Thi movie should get more love
Who composed the score for this version?
Been trying to find this myself. This is one of the best and most memorable versions for me.
@@shanzilla4147it was my first version of this movie. I wonder why they changed the characters' names back to their novel counterparts.
In the original 1922 presentation there was no mention of Count Dracula or any of the other characters from Bram Stoker's book. The film makers could not get permission to base it on the book, so they changed all the names, Count Dracula became Count Orlok and so on. Stoker's descendants later sued the film makers for copyright infringement and the court ordered all copies to be destroyed, but thankfully some survived. I've never seen a version where Nosferatu is called Count Dracula until now, did you change the names?
You are correct. After Murnau lost the lawsuit with the Stoker family, he was ordered to destroy all copies of the film. Luckily it had been distributed wide enough so that didn't happen. However, different versions do exist. This version does reference Stoker and Dracula but that was added not by us, most likely happening long before any of us were born, as we did try to find the earliest possible version we could, while also making sure the video quality was decent enough to be upscaled and was true to the original. I thought about redoing the opening titles to match the original exactly but decided against it as I don't think having it there detracts from the quality of the film that follows.
I found this movie boring I never hardly saw vampire and silent makes it worse
@@daisyalvarez501 why are you here then?
@@NoBudgetShowNosferatu (2024), Bill Skarsgard.
@@daisyalvarez501Nosferatu (2024), Bill Skarsgard.
Jah
The hash slinging
I can't stand silent movies
Why are you watching then?
Why are you here? I highly doubt the algorithm gave this to you unless you have been looking up silent movies.
Then better sit down.