Nosferatu (1922) [Silent Movie]

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июл 2012
  • If you like this movie and our channel, please subscribe: goo.gl/0qDmXe | "Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens" (translated as "Nosferatu, a symphony of horror" or simply "Nosferatu") is a classic 1922 German Expressionist horror film, directed by F. W. Murnau, starring Max Schreck as the vampire Count Orlok. The film, shot in 1921 and released in 1922, was an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker's "Dracula", with names and other details changed because the studio could not obtain the rights to the novel (for instance, "vampire" became "Nosferatu" and "Count Dracula" became "Count Orlok").
    ---
    Directed by F. W. Murnau, produced by Enrico Dieckmann and Albin Grau, screenplay by Henrik Galeen, based on "Dracula" by Bram Stoker, starring Max Schreck, Gustav von Wangenheim, Greta Schröder, Alexander Granach, Ruth Landshoff and Wolfgang Heinz.
    ---
    Source: "Nosferatu" Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.. 9 July 2012. Web. 09 July 2012. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nosferatu.
    If you like this movie and our channel, please subscribe: goo.gl/0qDmXe
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Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @srbarkerchan
    @srbarkerchan 5 лет назад +8800

    People who know who Nosferatu is:
    - Film buffs
    - People who've seen that one Spongebob episode

    • @albertolizardo1083
      @albertolizardo1083 4 года назад +93

      Sarah Barker you’re right 😂👌

    • @Kevmaster2000
      @Kevmaster2000 4 года назад +112

      Also Rick and Morty referenced him once. Coach Feratu.

    • @maddy5450
      @maddy5450 4 года назад +36

      there are 2

    • @talastra
      @talastra 4 года назад +8

      @@maddy5450 ^^ (i.e., the Herzog remake)

    • @MegaJesseman
      @MegaJesseman 4 года назад +41

      And people who play Fire Emblem and got curious to know what the nosferatu spell was based off of, so they looked it up.

  • @gavins.3573
    @gavins.3573 4 года назад +5831

    Who would’ve thought a hundred years later we’d still be watching this and on smartphones. How times have changed.

    • @wicked9358
      @wicked9358 4 года назад +53

      well is almost a century now 2 more years to go

    • @kfl611
      @kfl611 4 года назад +35

      But we are still finding it entertaining,

    • @olivernottingham
      @olivernottingham 4 года назад +19

      David Lynch won't be happy

    • @jimjimmy8900
      @jimjimmy8900 4 года назад

      @@AzathothTheGreat doesn't work like that

    • @funkyjeans65
      @funkyjeans65 4 года назад +16

      Doesn’t that make you think how much Film Making has advanced?

  • @LovleyLemonade
    @LovleyLemonade Год назад +813

    It's insane to think that there was only one copy of this at one point. Thank God it was kept safe by french film collector Henry Langlois.

    • @sjdrifter72
      @sjdrifter72 Год назад +2

      I'm sure there are many presumed lost silent and sound films that are owned by private collectors and institutions such as the Library of Congress and the Museum of Modern Art who are selfishly gatekeeping them and refusing to share them publicly, allowing only certain priviledged individuals to view them.

    • @101Volts
      @101Volts 9 месяцев назад +35

      One can only hope for other movies that are otherwise lost. Movies used to be on very volatile film, and that's why 20th Century Fox lost a bunch of their older films in 1937 in a gigantic storage building fire that also killed a 13 year old boy and injured his mother and brother. (The flames shot out the building sideways, in one spot as far as about 100 feet [or, longer than 5 Chevrolet Suburbans placed bumper to bumper with 1 inch between each car.])
      But besides that, there was no cheap and convenient home movie format - no DVD, no VHS, nothing of the sort. Movie Preservation wasn't on everyone's mind from 1900 - 1950, but I'm also confused as to *why* the director of the 1938 film "Algiers" tried to destroy every copy of the original 1937 film ("Pepe Le Moco") that his film was based on. I guess I can see why, but it's one of those moments when you look at previous generations and think "Wait, what???"

    • @RogerFoxYoutube
      @RogerFoxYoutube 8 месяцев назад +11

      He also hid it from the nazis.

    • @pixiesouter9461
      @pixiesouter9461 7 месяцев назад +11

      I mean, in Stoker's Widow's defense, they asked her if they could adapt Dracula, she said no, so they made this film. And although I am truly glad a copy survived and we still have this iconic piece of film, I also fully appreciate why Mrs Stoker was *pissed*
      It was a time when her only real opportunity for income at that time was through royalties on her late husband's work.

    • @michaelflores9384
      @michaelflores9384 6 месяцев назад +7

      And I think a lot of kids may see this movie later in life, since Nosferatu is on SpongeBob now, so they may be seeing it to know who he is.

  • @graceosborne8118
    @graceosborne8118 3 месяца назад +84

    the fact these types of once lost films are now fully viewable on youtube is truly incredible.

  • @davewade2041
    @davewade2041 6 лет назад +8203

    My Great-Grandmother saw this movie at her tiny hometown theatre in the 1920s. She took an aisle seat because my Grandma went too, in a baby stroller she kept next to her in the aisle. The 'air-conditioning' was large blocks of ice set in front of electric fans! The audience spoke the text aloud, together, for the benefit of anyone that couldn't read(many people were illiterate in those days). After the movie, it was several blocks to walk home alone in the dark since my Great-Grandpa worked that night, and Great-Grandma said she was terrified the whole way home, and jumped straight into bed with the baby and pulled the covers over her head! And she left the lights on too!

    • @lachlanwoods3774
      @lachlanwoods3774 6 лет назад +185

      Good for her

    • @brandonsewell1520
      @brandonsewell1520 6 лет назад +285

      Dave Wade Neat story!

    • @calfman3333
      @calfman3333 6 лет назад +430

      Thank God for stories like these.

    • @berrygoth2343
      @berrygoth2343 5 лет назад +755

      the fact that they would say the text out loud is so wholesome

    • @thehoneybadger1223
      @thehoneybadger1223 5 лет назад +125

      I love this! My nan wasn’t born until 7 years after the film was made, and my great-nan probably didn’t go to see it, she liked people to think she was fancy

  • @howdoyoudo4641
    @howdoyoudo4641 3 года назад +641

    Nothing like watching a classic horror movie and then suddenly there's a domino's ad.

    • @lauranovak8407
      @lauranovak8407 2 года назад +19

      Yea, i fkn hate it wn modrn life interfers w nostalgia (or whn th present interfers wth th past) Especially wn itz smthin like *Dom'sShtyPizza

    • @marixalilith
      @marixalilith 2 года назад +3

      I was thinking exactly same thing.

    • @roxassora2706
      @roxassora2706 2 года назад +4

      Hey, old timey horror and a treat. Who can pass that up?

    • @Erix442
      @Erix442 2 года назад +8

      I'm from Russia and thanks to sanction I can to watch RUclips without ads free.

    • @liammusgrove6334
      @liammusgrove6334 2 года назад

      We are getting Domino's tommorrow

  • @vamp1rette
    @vamp1rette 7 месяцев назад +110

    props to whoever is absolutely shredding the organ

  • @muggonny6141
    @muggonny6141 Год назад +707

    The scene where Nosferatu rose from his casket and said, "It's Nosferating time!" Absolute classic.

    • @dabeln1
      @dabeln1 Год назад +43

      The scene where the werewolf shows up and the horses say. "aw, hell naw!" Movie of all time.

    • @robsferatu
      @robsferatu Год назад +17

      He's called Count Orlok but okay 👌

    • @dystopianfuture1165
      @dystopianfuture1165 Год назад +20

      The scene where original joke made and original joke and said, “it’s original joking time!” Absolute classic.

    • @muggonny6141
      @muggonny6141 Год назад +26

      @@dystopianfuture1165 You're not fun in social groups.

    • @dystopianfuture1165
      @dystopianfuture1165 Год назад +14

      @@muggonny6141 You’re not funny in social groups

  • @Paarl871
    @Paarl871 4 года назад +3398

    “Then who was flickering the lights?”

  • @savannahw9087
    @savannahw9087 7 лет назад +1854

    "Your wife has a beautiful neck." Way to be subtle.

    • @WakaWaka2468
      @WakaWaka2468 7 лет назад +23

      Savannah w 27:51

    • @mickayla3891
      @mickayla3891 6 лет назад +105

      nigga also tried to suck his homies thumb

    • @CheshireCesare
      @CheshireCesare 5 лет назад +46

      I laughed SO hard when I first saw that.. 😂 Like, I've watched this movie countless times my whole life and it's still terrifying, but certain scenes like this and where he's running with his coffin will get me every time .. XD

    • @ozziejim8472
      @ozziejim8472 5 лет назад +15

      Reply: "Yes, I blew on it many times"

    • @thecchrist777cc6
      @thecchrist777cc6 5 лет назад +11

      Savannah w theres a reference to this in a band called Type O Negative, songs name is Black Number 1

  • @thetokutickler
    @thetokutickler 2 года назад +932

    After 100 years, the images of Nosferatu in the doorway and in the window are some of the most terrifying, nightmare inducing images I ever seen.

    • @naazriin
      @naazriin 2 года назад +93

      you forgot 2 mention the time where he starts flickering the lights!!

    • @orange_tangie216
      @orange_tangie216 Год назад +1

      @@fairsaa7975 ,…..:/

    • @naazriin
      @naazriin Год назад

      @@fairsaa7975 istg mfs always gotta try to find something 2 complain abt

    • @lucihexedofficial
      @lucihexedofficial Год назад +1

      I’d marry that images. It’s goals. ❤

    • @danemartinez193
      @danemartinez193 Год назад +2

      @@fairsaa7975 -🤓

  • @zenfrodo
    @zenfrodo Год назад +77

    Interesting fact: Illiteracy was still rampant during the Silent-film era, so literate audience members would often read the dialogue cards out loud for the benefit of audience members who couldn't read.

    • @Lepidopterous.
      @Lepidopterous. 2 месяца назад +9

      Back when motion pictures were still so new that 'stage theater' & 'movie theater' were still caught in a blend. (for someone to read cards aloud during a film)

    • @mrlsoarezz
      @mrlsoarezz 21 день назад +1

      That's sad and sweet at the same time

  • @julius9654
    @julius9654 7 лет назад +3517

    If that was you on the phone, and you on the bus.......
    Who was flickering the lights?

  • @LSPig
    @LSPig 3 года назад +3349

    This isn't just a movie ladies and gents, this is literally a piece of history.

    • @imtoddhowardandimadeskyrim6553
      @imtoddhowardandimadeskyrim6553 3 года назад +37

      Well I mean I piece of movie history

    • @lovelight7482
      @lovelight7482 3 года назад +7

      this is prophecy

    • @danc7934
      @danc7934 3 года назад +21

      The fact that it's made in the Weimar Republic when life sucked it's impressive

    • @sylph8005
      @sylph8005 2 года назад +4

      If you’re referring to covid, no it isn’t. They had their own pandemic back then.

    • @rasinterpreter6480
      @rasinterpreter6480 2 года назад +1

      @@danc7934 informative too

  • @Laurie_Ramone
    @Laurie_Ramone 8 месяцев назад +49

    Love how Orlok so helpfully drew a house on his letter to make sure that Knock really understood what he was asking for 😂

  • @Paotato69
    @Paotato69 2 года назад +1218

    Happy 100 year anniversary to this legendary piece of horror history!

  • @gingerlicious3500
    @gingerlicious3500 3 года назад +2082

    No lie, if I had seen this in 1922 I would've been scared shitless.

    • @stinkfinga4918
      @stinkfinga4918 2 года назад +90

      I saw this in like '94 as a kid and it still spooks me.

    • @johnwheatley5641
      @johnwheatley5641 2 года назад +50

      Right! I think the ship scenes are still some of the greatest horror scenes of all time!

    • @winecrimesfoodandtime7119
      @winecrimesfoodandtime7119 2 года назад +19

      True classic

    • @kel9361
      @kel9361 2 года назад +26

      I'm scared shitless watching it now 😂😂 especially at 30:10

    • @damikey18
      @damikey18 2 года назад +32

      @@kel9361then who's flickering the lights😟

  • @Silvereagledude
    @Silvereagledude 2 года назад +633

    I love it when Hutter is reading the book, laughs heartily, and throws the book on the ground really hard, even though it is not his book

    • @nicholasshade
      @nicholasshade 2 года назад +9

      I love that part as well.💛

    • @stinkfinga4918
      @stinkfinga4918 2 года назад +70

      'Tis a silly book, yeet'

    • @TheSuckoShow
      @TheSuckoShow Год назад +1

      He's kind of a jerkass in almost every version of the story.

    • @itzakpoelzig330
      @itzakpoelzig330 Год назад +9

      That bummed me out. It looked like a cool book.

    • @PopfulFrost
      @PopfulFrost 6 месяцев назад +6

      People in this movie act really weird in general. I dig it.

  • @guidoferri8683
    @guidoferri8683 Год назад +39

    The coachman: I can't go further, it's too creepy
    The postman: Nobody will get between me and my job

    • @mauricewascom658
      @mauricewascom658 Год назад +2

      Yeah . . . Right ❗😂😹

    • @gallibon1319
      @gallibon1319 Год назад +2

      That's one brave postman.

    • @betmo
      @betmo Год назад +3

      and with no pants! or so it looked 🤷‍♀️

    • @kermodecarver2103
      @kermodecarver2103 Месяц назад +1

      Protestant work ethic.

    • @kaasmeester5903
      @kaasmeester5903 3 дня назад +1

      "Neither snow nor rain nor heat, nor bitey vampires..."

  • @phpeon9282
    @phpeon9282 Год назад +181

    Nosferatu is the embodiment of the uncanny valley and the classical vampire, he looks (barely) human-ish but you can never truly pinpoint what's actually wrong about him. His gestures, mannerism, speech pattern, he could threaten you in the face and you wouldn't realize until it's too late.

    • @xerozoo
      @xerozoo Год назад +4

      Totally. I personally prefer the Klaus Kinski Nosferatu over this one because of this one's antisemitic stereotypes. This one is better dressed though.

    • @boboboy8189
      @boboboy8189 Год назад +13

      ​@@xerozoo only racist saw everything as racism

    • @xerozoo
      @xerozoo Год назад +3

      @@boboboy8189 Wow, you really took me down a peg. How embarrassing.

    • @brotherd4867
      @brotherd4867 Год назад +9

      "Nosferatu" means "plague-bringer." Hence Orlok's rat-like appearance.

    • @morgant.dulaman8733
      @morgant.dulaman8733 Год назад +14

      @@xerozoo The director for this film was Jewish, as were several members of the staff. I think they simply went with the characteristics on this one because they found them frightening.

  • @SuperRaedizzle
    @SuperRaedizzle 3 года назад +3162

    I’m here doing research for a video and I’m actually really surprised how elaborate the scenes, the acting and the music are. I bet seeing this movie in 1922 was a game changer

    • @damlaerbahan
      @damlaerbahan 3 года назад +114

      i m really upset about it we never understand and feel this movie like people who watched in 1922.. after we watch the shining, it follow ..etc our horror sense much more diffrent now

    • @seahawk193
      @seahawk193 3 года назад +10

      Rae!!!!

    • @aliza5363
      @aliza5363 3 года назад +72

      This would’ve scared a lot of people back then. It’s fascinating to see the drastic change in horror films. Would’ve made it spookier with no sound.

    • @bloodmoonspirits6558
      @bloodmoonspirits6558 3 года назад +74

      It was banned in a lot of places. Demons and all that. It was never released in america, only in germany and they got in trouble for copying the dracula novel but changing names, so all copies were to be destroyed... but some survived and here we are

    • @ivans.191
      @ivans.191 3 года назад +52

      It's really a masterpiece. After watching Nosferatu I became obsessed with horror classics. And eventually wrote a book about the history of the genre. This film is very inspiring!

  • @Titanic-bs1cw
    @Titanic-bs1cw 4 года назад +833

    I love the bit when he’s supposed to say “I’m going to count Orlak’s castle!” And they all look at him like “AW HELL NAW”

    • @sergiowinter5383
      @sergiowinter5383 3 года назад +72

      "So, you have choosen death"

    • @Boundlessness
      @Boundlessness 2 года назад +63

      Me too. Even 100 years ago the rules of horror remained the same: never go into the creepy old mansion/castle.

    • @fromthecheapseats7126
      @fromthecheapseats7126 Год назад +4

      I know you didn’t mean to write “Orlak,” but are you aware of the 1924 silent horror film “Hands of Orlac?”

    • @andreichivu7653
      @andreichivu7653 Год назад

      @@fromthecheapseats7126 he,he...Conrad Veidt..

    • @ShamasAhman
      @ShamasAhman 5 месяцев назад

      😂Ikr

  • @tokuwriter2872
    @tokuwriter2872 2 года назад +181

    You have helped create a landscape of Horror and Terror; influenced over 100 years.
    You not only created the onscreen Vampire, you defined it, pioneered, and created a vision that still holds up to this very second of this day.
    Happy Birthday Nosferatu, Long Live Count Orlock.

    • @desertsecrets
      @desertsecrets 2 года назад +1

      Yes

    • @josephswolin7450
      @josephswolin7450 3 месяца назад

      Long live the count! His visions inspire my dreams every night and day.

  • @lubomirafaskova5165
    @lubomirafaskova5165 2 года назад +227

    Our beautiful landscape and nature in SLOVAKIA! 14:09 High Tatras with the blind lakes 18:05 and other shots Orloks Home sweet home is Orava Castle 37:09 raft on the river Váh 1:20:36 Starhrad (Old Castle) in the town district Žilina
    5:09 Orlok is already here! :D

    • @belaorhideja4020
      @belaorhideja4020 2 года назад +6

      I had no idea they filmed it there!! So beautiful!!

    • @alexs5744
      @alexs5744 Год назад +9

      At the time it was called Czechoslovakia and just a few years earlier it was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

    • @lubomirafaskova5165
      @lubomirafaskova5165 Год назад +7

      @@belaorhideja4020 ... yes, we are a small country, but there is a beautiful nature here, many castles (for example romantic Bojnice castle, Čachtice castle - countess Elizabeth Bathory), mineral springs, caves and national parks.

    • @lubomirafaskova5165
      @lubomirafaskova5165 Год назад +7

      @@alexs5744 ... yes, but now we are independent states, in 1989 the Czechs and Slovaks divorced peacefully, and they continue to strive for good relations, because they have the most similar language and mentality of all the states.

    • @belaorhideja4020
      @belaorhideja4020 Год назад +6

      @@lubomirafaskova5165 Just googled these location and they are all stunning!!Hope to visit them someday!! Love from slavic sister

  • @andrewbuckner6319
    @andrewbuckner6319 5 лет назад +9449

    The music was too loud I couldn't hear the dialogue

    • @directorkid3131
      @directorkid3131 5 лет назад +257

      😂

    • @directorkid3131
      @directorkid3131 5 лет назад +113

      @Alec Hinshaw woooooooooosh

    • @astarvingafrican3629
      @astarvingafrican3629 5 лет назад +35

      @Alec Hinshaw r/woooshhh

    • @OgRob3rt
      @OgRob3rt 5 лет назад +29

      @Alec Hinshaw wooooosh

    • @jinxtheminx
      @jinxtheminx 5 лет назад +46

      @Alec Hinshaw That's the point lol. You didn't know it was a joke... Therefore WOOOOOSH As people are pointing out that it went right over your head. If you got the joke no one would have tried to correct you as your comment would not have been made.

  • @diavolo8098
    @diavolo8098 4 года назад +1728

    We are living in a great age. because we can enjoy this masterpiece by free

    • @ginogatash4030
      @ginogatash4030 4 года назад +46

      *For free

    • @lasemanamayor9396
      @lasemanamayor9396 4 года назад +16

      In a way....
      We have finally arrived at the truth

    • @KARKATELCESARENVIADODESA-pv4yd
      @KARKATELCESARENVIADODESA-pv4yd 4 года назад +9

      Boss!

    • @nicolassosolic3760
      @nicolassosolic3760 4 года назад +2

      Masterpiece??? Looking back,that sucks! lol Only a movie snob can call it "A masterpiece"

    • @CheerUp2
      @CheerUp2 4 года назад +74

      @@nicolassosolic3760 Damn you must have never taken any sort of film or avant garde classes. Alot of what makes it great is the timing, the shot and composition, lighting, and the vampire makeup of the time. Like arguably and artistically this movie still holds up well. It still gives you great horror and sends chills up you spin with such simplicity.
      You say only a snob calls it a masterpiece but only a uncreative normie says it sucks.

  • @keaton_jb_meme_central
    @keaton_jb_meme_central Год назад +69

    You can have your Pennywise, Jason, Micheal or Chucky, but Nosferatu is seriously an eerie movie. Happy 100 years Count Orlok

  • @BlazeMaster
    @BlazeMaster 2 года назад +29

    You know what's humorous is that when they made it, they never expected that anybody would be watching this movie 10 years later, in fact by 1932 everyone forgot this movie ever existed only for it to be rediscovered for the purpose of watching it by a new medium..... And now here we are 100 years later and watching it via completely different medium, without even owning the original reel.

  • @Howlingburd19
    @Howlingburd19 4 года назад +1163

    Here’s some interesting facts:
    The 1922 Nosferatu film was based on the Bram Stoker’s 1897 Dracula novel, so to try to avoid copyright, they changed the name from Count Dracula to Count Orlok, and the title from Dracula to Nosferatu (another interesting fact about the word “Nosferatu” is that it’s kinda “lost in time”. While it’s uncertain, the origin of the word is believed to be of Romanian, and it was used in the Dracula novel as a synonym for “vampire”. Credit to Suki La Hood for the fact).
    These copyright issues was also the reason why the film was originally never released in America and only in Germany. However, it did end up being a victim of copyright, and a court ruled all copies be destroyed! However, a few copies survived, and today, the movie “Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror”, is known as one of the best and most influential horror films of all time :D
    And this movie is still legendary in 2023 :)

    • @bronsonnolan1383
      @bronsonnolan1383 3 года назад +50

      Actually they couldnt get the rights from bram strokers widow, so thats why hes called Orlok and so forth

    • @christorpher84
      @christorpher84 3 года назад +15

      @Elena Țăpean bullshit she deserves compensation for her Husbands work

    • @donkeycheese8098
      @donkeycheese8098 3 года назад +41

      Imagine we lost it and it became lost media, no Spongebob, Me not running up the stairs thinking he'd come after me

    • @zabglobalcinema4010
      @zabglobalcinema4010 3 года назад +1

      !'^+%&/()=?_?=)(/&%+^'You are invited to our film company. We broadcast subtitles for our movies in most languages. It doesn't matter what language you know.

    • @Rascaduanok
      @Rascaduanok 3 года назад +19

      The word ‘Nosferatu’ is also in the Dracula book as well.

  • @danr2652
    @danr2652 3 года назад +515

    In 1922 : I wonder what the future will look like 90 years from now.
    98 years later: 1.3 Million are Watching a 1922 Silent movie.
    Welcome to the future!

    • @G-Hood
      @G-Hood 3 года назад +4

      What's with the lighting?

    • @AmazingBlaze0
      @AmazingBlaze0 3 года назад

      Wow since then 300,000 have watched it

    • @AmazingBlaze0
      @AmazingBlaze0 3 года назад +7

      They couldn’t film in the dark so had to make a bluish purple tent to create the night time effect

    • @hopemueller2658
      @hopemueller2658 3 года назад +2

      We're under quarantine

    • @vamsikrishna3672
      @vamsikrishna3672 2 года назад

      Well film professors do love assigning the oldest movies they can find

  • @donmertz2171
    @donmertz2171 2 года назад +35

    I first saw Nosferatu in 1971 as part of 6th grade historic film study. Pure genius for its time. It never gets "old" and was the major influence in my love for old films.

  • @LSSYLondon
    @LSSYLondon Год назад +50

    I'm happy I watched this on Halloween 100 years after it was made. The creepiness of the shadow of the fingers and the way he fades in and out... amazing!

  • @IHitLilSally
    @IHitLilSally 4 года назад +1700

    My favorite part is when they brought out the hyena and said it’s a werewolf

    • @silasespersen6569
      @silasespersen6569 4 года назад +55

      I second this.

    • @laus7504
      @laus7504 4 года назад +100

      I was hoping someone in the comments said that was a hyena! Thank you!
      Looked too cute or something.

    • @RattieTheFattie
      @RattieTheFattie 4 года назад +3

      When?

    • @redlobsterhobo4972
      @redlobsterhobo4972 4 года назад +16

      Myrm Ants Harrison Ford truly embodied that role.

    • @chloerodriguez1514
      @chloerodriguez1514 4 года назад +20

      And I thought I was tripping🤗

  • @user-uz4cc6qz1q
    @user-uz4cc6qz1q 8 лет назад +1383

    the fact that it's so old makes it so much scarier.... Legit a lot scarier than any new horror film

    • @randeepbirdi3793
      @randeepbirdi3793 7 лет назад +50

      L omg yes! this vampires face has always scared me since childhood and I love horror movies. but y r right, old is gold like they say

    • @thalassafourtines5264
      @thalassafourtines5264 6 лет назад +54

      L it's actually quite a beautiful film. Most silents are too melodramatic to be scary to me, but the overall ambiance is spooky in a good way. Precisely because its old. I've seen 1920s films scarier than this. The Lodger is legit creepy, its another classic. One of the scariest things about Nosferatu is the emergence of the plague from his ancient Transylvanian rats. Willard 1971 is a creepy film on many levels about rats, if you like old horror movies.

    • @tenceone9306
      @tenceone9306 6 лет назад +10

      Thalassa Fourtines i like The Cabinet Of Dr. Caligari and The Phantom Of The Opera.

    • @booksnotdetention4853
      @booksnotdetention4853 6 лет назад +32

      Also knowing that everyone who made and was in the film is dead, is even more scarier to me.

    • @kure3353
      @kure3353 6 лет назад

      hhahahaaha comedy

  • @productions4452
    @productions4452 2 года назад +36

    As of yesterday.
    100 years since this masterpiece has been released.

  • @georgew3270
    @georgew3270 2 года назад +23

    This movie is now officially 100 years old 🦇🦇🦇

  • @Hyrit
    @Hyrit 4 года назад +395

    50:51 this is one of the most classic horror scene's in a silent film. Brilliant.

    • @stargazer6074
      @stargazer6074 3 года назад +36

      1:16 where you see his shadow going up the staircase then reaching for the door is a creepy classic moment.

    • @michaelbruns449
      @michaelbruns449 2 года назад +3

      Diabolical and haunting...

    • @rog9601
      @rog9601 2 года назад +11

      Think about it, this was 100 years ago. No special effects like today, not even sound, and it is just a creepy !

    • @johnwheatley5641
      @johnwheatley5641 2 года назад

      Yes I think all the ship scenes are just incredible!

    • @300kdping
      @300kdping 2 года назад +1

      jojo reference

  • @brigidroche1006
    @brigidroche1006 3 года назад +475

    “Your wife has a beautiful neck” 😂😂”I will buy this beautiful.. deserted house ... across from yours”

    • @marclemoine7815
      @marclemoine7815 3 года назад +29

      Best lines. Hearty laugh reading those lines

    • @chernobylcoleslaw6698
      @chernobylcoleslaw6698 2 года назад +15

      Me trying to make small talk after being in iso for ever how long.

    • @FrancescaC84
      @FrancescaC84 3 месяца назад

      These northerns! Any sane husband here would have misunderstood and sent him away in bad manners after such a speech 😆

  • @billybletsos4758
    @billybletsos4758 2 года назад +69

    This was from 1922:
    - CGI was never real
    - Social media was not real
    - Movies had no dialogue
    - A Spanish Flu was taking place
    100 years later in 2022:
    - we're still in the middle of a pandemic
    - This is STILL a scary horror film

    • @diobrando6177
      @diobrando6177 Год назад

      That makes no sense

    • @billybletsos4758
      @billybletsos4758 Год назад +1

      @@diobrando6177 I'm just saying that 100 years ago, the world was so different compared to now

    • @boboboy8189
      @boboboy8189 Год назад

      ​@@diobrando6177 "it's makes sense if you force into it"

    • @rociorodriguezgarcia6127
      @rociorodriguezgarcia6127 11 месяцев назад

      No era "gripe española": está ya comprobado los primeros casos se dieron en Norteamérica.

    • @101Volts
      @101Volts 9 месяцев назад

      - Prohibition had started in 1920 and ended in 1933.
      - World War I had ended in 1918, and you would see War Veterans missing limbs.
      - Automobiles weren't as common.
      - *Refrigerators* didn't even exist in the consumer market until 1927, but even then, they cost over $7,000 in equivalent!
      - Instead of Refrigerators, people used Ice Boxes. That's why you can see "Ice Delivery Wagons" in movies that take place before 1927, and even a bit after it (like that Three Stooges episode from the 1930s.)
      - Early Refrigerators, in the event of leaking the gas they ran on, could kill people. Because of this, there were some people who *never* owned a fridge in all their life. Can you imagine? Someone would be born in 1910 or so, then still not own a fridge in 1980, just a few years before Ghostbusters came out in theaters!

  • @faisalwho
    @faisalwho 4 года назад +198

    ‘You there, man on a horse! Take this letter to my wife. It reads “I miss you, I have mosquito bites”’

  • @ernestovalenzuela466
    @ernestovalenzuela466 8 лет назад +1715

    He's not flickering any lights

    • @mikhailvasiliev6275
      @mikhailvasiliev6275 8 лет назад +11

      +Ernest Valenzuela Haha, clever.

    • @Arahansannihilation
      @Arahansannihilation 7 лет назад +14

      It took me about a minute or so before I got the joke.

    • @Leon-me4bb
      @Leon-me4bb 7 лет назад +20

      spongebob "graveyard shift"

    • @ernestovalenzuela466
      @ernestovalenzuela466 7 лет назад +5

      Kenny the Rabbit Your Username and Avatar and smiley face are deceivingly friendly. Not cool bro.

    • @KennethV2000
      @KennethV2000 7 лет назад +3

      TOM! I TOLD U TO BE NICE TO PEOPLE! Sorry about that.

  • @Merit2397
    @Merit2397 2 года назад +60

    Happy 100 anniversary Nosferatu! As a fan of horror, I thought I'd stop by to pay my respects.

  • @jonathanlopez5624
    @jonathanlopez5624 Год назад +15

    The first reveal of Nosferatu as the vampire was a pretty good little jump scare.. i can only imagine how the audience reacted when they first saw him!!! I know i would been jumping out of my seat hiding as well!!

  • @Snapepet
    @Snapepet 5 лет назад +1732

    96 years old. Almost 100.

    • @Garrysullivanjones
      @Garrysullivanjones 5 лет назад +13

      Snapepet Woodstock is almost 50 man

    • @IETCHX69
      @IETCHX69 5 лет назад +10

      Shocking statements . Both ... !

    • @cata208
      @cata208 4 года назад +1

      You dont Say

    • @mew104
      @mew104 4 года назад +26

      97 now

    • @BrianCarnevaleB26
      @BrianCarnevaleB26 4 года назад +1

      shot in Sepia. Its like you go back in time.

  • @boxmeister3059
    @boxmeister3059 4 года назад +2445

    People who memorized the Bee Movie Script: Legendary
    People who memorized Shrek script: Godly
    People who memorized Nosferatu script: *On another plane of existence*

    • @MisterSpeedStacking
      @MisterSpeedStacking 4 года назад +104

      epic fact: dracula here is played by a guy named Max Schrek (shrek) haha

    • @weakpig
      @weakpig 4 года назад +40

      @@MisterSpeedStacking coincidence....? I think not... Perhaps there's some unnatural connection to get children acclimatised to the dark horrors

    • @ytgc-royalewarex5190
      @ytgc-royalewarex5190 3 года назад +17

      More like "People who memorized Hotel Transylvania Movie Scrypt : Godly"

    • @Frozo-nt2ky
      @Frozo-nt2ky 3 года назад +9

      Hahaha it’s a silent movie

    • @zabglobalcinema4010
      @zabglobalcinema4010 3 года назад

      !'^+%&/()=?_?=)(/&%+^'You are invited to our film company. We broadcast subtitles for our movies in most languages. It doesn't matter what language you know.

  • @elvistattoo1964
    @elvistattoo1964 2 года назад +27

    Timeless, classic, priceless…and the scariest vampire portrayal ever. Love silent horror!

  • @razorshark9320
    @razorshark9320 Год назад +18

    This is a true horror classic. The acting and the music is amazing for 1922.

  • @adriancline-bailey3301
    @adriancline-bailey3301 3 года назад +306

    For a film made in 1922, this was incredible, they had continuity shots, location research, Extra's, the American cut was everywhere, they had a pan, they had 'magic' where Nosferatu put himself in a coffin and telekinetically raise the coffin cover to close his coffin really solid work for something made in 1922, and over an hour as well.

  • @emilykhine3743
    @emilykhine3743 5 лет назад +304

    This movie is almost 100 years old but it still gives me the creeps! That’s how eerily powerful this movie is! 😱

    • @jackwatson3944
      @jackwatson3944 3 года назад +6

      Your comment is old and gives me the creeps

    • @williamanthony9090
      @williamanthony9090 2 года назад +6

      Which only goes to prove good entertainment stands the test of time!

    • @DrDonkeyKong2
      @DrDonkeyKong2 2 года назад +8

      It's exactly 100 years today

    • @scottmoore1614
      @scottmoore1614 2 года назад +4

      Very creepy. I’m sure it really scared the hell out of people back when it first came out.

    • @naazriin
      @naazriin 2 года назад +1

      honestly i think the movie is funny

  • @jj-if6it
    @jj-if6it 2 года назад +25

    It's now 2022. 100 years sounds like a long time but when you get older you realise it's not. My parents were born less than 30 years after this film came out. Things change so fast but to think 100 years ago we were only just starting to see full length movies, and they were still silent.

    • @AX5Terminator
      @AX5Terminator 2 года назад +1

      I know somebody that was 3 years old when this movie came out. It's crazy to me that he's older than this film.

  • @mikes.7654
    @mikes.7654 Год назад +9

    Literally every vampire film and almost anything else with a vampire in it owes a debt of gratitude to this film. In 100 years, this movie has never been topped and never will be.

  • @captaindeadpool980
    @captaindeadpool980 7 лет назад +376

    How can anyone complain about, a really well, put together story from the 1920s. This would have really scared a lot of people back then. As this was the very first time people had seen Dracula, other than an artistic rendition in books. As it was a first to, you can't compare this to any other movie that came after, plus this was done with (back then) cutting edge technology.

    • @ScreamingAllTheTime
      @ScreamingAllTheTime 6 лет назад +19

      Captain RossPool the only complaints I have is I riff on Hutter just being a complete buffoon

    • @bridgettwagner6569
      @bridgettwagner6569 4 года назад +1

      👍

    • @khtech7508
      @khtech7508 4 года назад

      Captain DeadPool this shit is a comedy

    • @nobodysperfect06
      @nobodysperfect06 4 года назад

      @Sasuke Uchiha what was the name of that Dracula film?

    • @robertnema7830
      @robertnema7830 4 года назад

      FW Murnau was pure genius!!!!

  • @MissMarchHare
    @MissMarchHare 7 лет назад +467

    still one of the creepiest characters ever recorded

    • @brugafe
      @brugafe 5 лет назад +12

      Samir Norris that’s not scary

    • @legostarwarsbattledroid5272
      @legostarwarsbattledroid5272 4 года назад +8

      @Samir Norris your a scrub. Thats not scary at all

    • @Stigmatix666
      @Stigmatix666 4 года назад +10

      I'd actually argue Klaus Kinski otdoes Max Shreck in the '79 remake of this movie. Klaus Kinski was in fact a verified diagnosed psychopath and that bleeds through in every scene he's in.
      He's intense and utterly terrifying on a very disturbingly real level, when you're aware of his mental state of mind..

    • @Dequantivous3rd
      @Dequantivous3rd 4 года назад +3

      Nah dude you have to know that a spider is way scarier

    • @appalachiahiker853
      @appalachiahiker853 4 года назад

      Blu Tips fedora

  • @mr.saf_ford4464
    @mr.saf_ford4464 2 года назад +16

    *PLEASE DON'T DELETE OR REMOVE THIS MASTER PIECE! IT DESERVE TO LIVE! PLEASE DONT*

  • @kimtieu8680
    @kimtieu8680 Год назад +15

    Without a doubt one of the most iconic vampire movies ever made considering that it was one of the first vampire movies. Add to the fact that it stars Max Schreck as Count Orlok makes this movie even more iconic and unforgettable.

  • @theeoddments960
    @theeoddments960 5 лет назад +467

    The part at 34:45 actually scared the shit out of me when his face is peeking through the casket and the music gets distorted from being so loud.
    It’s a very subtle scary. I only truly get scared of this movie when I’m left alone completely in the dark. Like taking trash out in the middle of the night. My driveway is super long and surrounded by long bony trees it’s easy to feel vulnerable. Then I remember the image of him standing in the doorway like 9 feet tall with his arms draped over his body. That’s what terrifies me. That’s what we need back in modern horror.

    • @goob569
      @goob569 4 года назад +6

      That part made me laugh so much

    • @carriettawhite3000
      @carriettawhite3000 4 года назад +1

      Curious Betsy vlogs-Yeah, that was quite creepy.

    • @carriettawhite3000
      @carriettawhite3000 4 года назад +3

      The one and only Bob Ross-The dudes reaction was funny af, was pissing mahself 🤣🤣

    • @anitaharrell3716
      @anitaharrell3716 4 года назад

      Lol

    • @dan-ho1zz
      @dan-ho1zz 4 года назад

      Damn I’d be scared too if the trees by my driveway had bones

  • @KTChamberlain
    @KTChamberlain 3 года назад +231

    Max Schreck: the absolute best name for an actor in a horror movie, especially in playing a monster, because Schreck in German means "terror". That, just like the movie itself, highlights what a once-in-a-lifetime sort of thing this is.

    • @donnalee.
      @donnalee. 3 года назад +11

      Like Usain Bolt or Stevie Wonder

    • @casewhite-954
      @casewhite-954 2 года назад +3

      Terror means Terror in german.

    • @Hi-fd4cw
      @Hi-fd4cw Год назад +1

      “Wonder” isn’t his real last name, it’s a pseudonym. Doesn’t work as well since it’s not his real name

    • @hatless9382
      @hatless9382 Год назад

      @@Hi-fd4cw actually wonder isn’t his last name it’s a pseudonym 🤓🤓🤓

    • @nosferattusx2
      @nosferattusx2 10 месяцев назад

      Max Shrek

  • @AbbasIdris
    @AbbasIdris Год назад +9

    More than a century later, Nosferatu is still a masterpiece that anyone can enjoy watching regardless of age. I truly love it!

  • @hoozerob
    @hoozerob Год назад +32

    You know that when a movie from 100 years ago can scare the crap out of a society, that has seen all the horror movies from that point on, it's a masterpiece. Simply made, simple effects, probably low budget. It just seems more relevant than the actual Bram Stoker's version, called "Dracula".

  • @joshkurzitza7981
    @joshkurzitza7981 3 года назад +214

    30:10 me trying to be extra quiet at 2am whilst getting a snack

  • @lilliansundwall8160
    @lilliansundwall8160 4 года назад +593

    Who else watching this during quarantine?

  • @The_LORD_saves
    @The_LORD_saves 2 года назад +5

    This movie touched on the concept of quarantine before it was cool

    • @Styxswimmer
      @Styxswimmer Год назад +1

      Actually, the idea of a quarantine goes back to the days of the black death from 1347-1351. One city mandated a 40 day waiting period for all incoming ships. That's the origin of it.

  • @lucyinthesky4682
    @lucyinthesky4682 Год назад +17

    It's wonderful that so many still enjoy the film on its 100th anniversary. I always think about the little cat in the beginning, first kitty immortalized on film playing with a toy. I don't know that, I just think it's so cute and ordinary in this memorable movie.

  • @ifolded
    @ifolded 8 лет назад +1370

    If your here then who's flickering the lights?

    • @BiohazardRevelations
      @BiohazardRevelations 7 лет назад +42

      Damir Smith One of the best Spongebob episodes ever! Nosferatuuuuu! Then Smiles! Gets me every time lol

    • @ifolded
      @ifolded 7 лет назад +1

      Facts

    • @ifolded
      @ifolded 7 лет назад

      hallof fame how does it make me a "Ghetto nigga"? You just said it too so gtfo my comment...

    • @mattmillilord5603
      @mattmillilord5603 7 лет назад +1

      +hallof fame Pretty much everyone says "facts". Don't be cringey fam.

    • @howardpoole5391
      @howardpoole5391 7 лет назад +9

      Graveyard Shift

  • @Wglass90
    @Wglass90 6 лет назад +364

    No one brought more visual terror to Horror or the Vampire film genre quite on the level that Max Schreck did. He legitimately looked like a monster/vampire to the point where you start questioning yourself if he really was one, which was mainly due to his method acting and him not breaking character throughout most of the production of Nosferatu which made it brilliant. If I was walking alone at night, I'd definitely wouldn't want to come across Count Orlok in a dark alley. Nosferatu is as dark and classy a film can get which is what a lot of films today simply lack. In my opinion, the more they tried to romanticize Vampires, the less scary and frightening they became.

    • @Stigmatix666
      @Stigmatix666 4 года назад +4

      Except for maybe Klaus Kinski?

    • @GilbertSyndrome
      @GilbertSyndrome 4 года назад +6

      @@Stigmatix666 Herzog's version is also Brilliant, Kinski plays the part very well.

    • @GilbertSyndrome
      @GilbertSyndrome 4 года назад +10

      I agree, I'm not interested in a romanticized vampire. I definitely prefer the Nosferatu-style versus the classic Dracula version.

    • @Stigmatix666
      @Stigmatix666 4 года назад

      @@GilbertSyndrome Extremely well

    • @dungeon-wn4gw
      @dungeon-wn4gw 4 года назад +2

      @@GilbertSyndrome
      This is why I believe that Daniel Day-Lewis should come out of retirement to play one last role, as Count Orlok in like a prequel or some shit. Daniel would fucking knock it out of the park

  • @Niili187
    @Niili187 Год назад +7

    What an astonishing movie. This year it has turned 100 years old. Beautiful and amazing.

  • @raphaelmarquez9650
    @raphaelmarquez9650 2 года назад +8

    Happy 100th anniversary to the one Night Shift joke from Spongebob.

  • @NiLowther
    @NiLowther 6 лет назад +92

    13:50 "These are filled with goddamned soil" reads totally differently a century later

  • @Alexurquiaga12345678
    @Alexurquiaga12345678 7 лет назад +544

    So when the screen is yellow, it is either daylight or inside. When it is blue, it is night. Pink/magenta it is sunrise or sunset. At least thats what i put together in my head. Idk if thats right but its something with the time of day

    • @MisakaMikotoDesu
      @MisakaMikotoDesu 6 лет назад +42

      Cameras back then could not record during the night. There was simply not enough light to work with.

    • @tycalvert9633
      @tycalvert9633 6 лет назад +18

      Misaka Mikoto they would set up lights around the set have you never seen the movie about this movie? If not i think it would be well worth your time

    • @MisakaMikotoDesu
      @MisakaMikotoDesu 6 лет назад +19

      +Ty Calvert
      That works in some circumstances, but it's not easy to light an entire forest at night without making it look strange. There are tradeoffs between what can be done and what's effective to do.

    • @noraizab6185
      @noraizab6185 6 лет назад +11

      That'a what it means actually because we analyze this film in class and that's what my teacher said as well.

    • @ScreamingAllTheTime
      @ScreamingAllTheTime 6 лет назад +30

      I figured the blue part as a clever way to show night since they couldn’t film at night. Nice thinking on the pink part.

  • @gunnerdavidson7287
    @gunnerdavidson7287 2 года назад +10

    Watching this for the first time on the 100th anniversary. What a good film.

  • @visitargentinanow1874
    @visitargentinanow1874 Год назад +8

    After 100 years, still the most scaring movie you can see.

  • @Cindy67917
    @Cindy67917 7 лет назад +343

    30:18
    Squidward: "If that was you on the phone and you on the bus, then who was flickering the lights?"
    **the lights flickered on and off again, but it was Count Orlok doing it**
    Everyone: "Nosferatu!"
    **Count Orlok smiles at the camera**

    • @guzman8224
      @guzman8224 6 лет назад +3

      2 sp00ky 4 m3

    • @hydraarctic1554
      @hydraarctic1554 5 лет назад +14

      When I saw that as a kid I was legitimately terrified and I hated that episode

    • @lilbopeeep3165
      @lilbopeeep3165 5 лет назад +3

      @@hydraarctic1554 and that's why it's banned....still my favourite episode

    • @NoseyBonk5599
      @NoseyBonk5599 5 лет назад +1

      Hydra Arctic dude i was 4 and i loved that episode

  • @jackwatson3944
    @jackwatson3944 3 года назад +236

    The Samsung s20 adverts must of really confused the original audience.

  • @ashlynnheller8400
    @ashlynnheller8400 Год назад +6

    One of my big rules when watching old horror is to try to imagine what it must have been like for people when it came out. I can defenitly see how this would be terrifying. Heck, I find it unsettling now.

  • @emanuelezambetta1534
    @emanuelezambetta1534 2 года назад +6

    Happy 100th birthday, Nosferatu!

  • @TheSavageBountyHunter
    @TheSavageBountyHunter 4 года назад +119

    the resolution is actually quite good for such an old movie. I'm impressed it's not all grainy and blurry. thank you TCM for uploading this

    • @Flesh_licking_spider_monkeys
      @Flesh_licking_spider_monkeys 3 года назад +1

      I know this comment is a year old but here is an even better version. ruclips.net/video/e7p3ct5hcks/видео.html

    • @anSealgair
      @anSealgair Год назад +4

      That’s just film. Old technology but good. It’s when videotape started being used and the equipment was able to be cheaply made that picture quality took a dive.

  • @conpulpo
    @conpulpo 3 года назад +31

    "and the walls will ooze green slime!
    No, wait. They always do that."

  • @danielvandersall6756
    @danielvandersall6756 Год назад +7

    So nice to see the color tinting in this version--most people believe that this film was in strict black and white. Actually, the color was added to the film, to differentiate light and darkness (Day for night not being invented yet. And never perfected.) Almost impossible to find in any copy--the only one I ever found (and promptly bought) is the Kino Lorber cut.

  • @iybutt
    @iybutt 2 года назад +3

    Happy 100th, Nosferatu. You haven't aged a day!

  • @szandor1214
    @szandor1214 4 года назад +78

    Who's watching this in the 1920's?

  • @elsenderotranquilo
    @elsenderotranquilo 3 года назад +72

    50:51 that scene is awesome, the unnatural way he raises himself, very powerful and frightening.

  • @manolokonosko2868
    @manolokonosko2868 Год назад +4

    Stroke it, Mrs. Stoker! The film you ordered destroyed is 100 years old, and the greatest of all!

  • @stephenpereira9727
    @stephenpereira9727 Год назад +14

    It has now officially been 100 Years! Happy 100th Anniversary on film Nosferatu 🎉🍾🧛🏻‍♂️

  • @pleasesetmeonfire1166
    @pleasesetmeonfire1166 5 лет назад +34

    Knowing everyone in this movie is long gone makes me really existential

    • @jalel_z2867
      @jalel_z2867 2 года назад +12

      It's oddly comforting to me, thinking that if I manage to do something as impactful or important like this, I will be remembered or at least acknowledged in what I leave behind

  • @sirfun1059
    @sirfun1059 5 лет назад +100

    My great grandma saw this when it came out it was one of her favorite movies but she got so scared every time she watched it.

  • @FirstNameLastName-oz5ij
    @FirstNameLastName-oz5ij 2 года назад +16

    Just watched this movie for the first time tonight in celebration of its (belated) 100th anniversary this year. Gotta say, I was really impressed by the visuals, especially the parts where Orlok faded into view or away as a means of warping. I didn't even know they were capable of doing those types of special effects 100 years ago. I'm glad I got to watch an all-time classic before the end of its 100th anniversary year. It's amazing to think what I just watched is literally a century old!

  • @billyno-neck9576
    @billyno-neck9576 2 года назад +5

    Happy birthday, Count Orlok!

  • @barsbay7598
    @barsbay7598 2 года назад +77

    I love the scene at 1:07:11 how it doesn't do a zoom in on Nosferatu so you can only see or even notice him if you look closely, or if you know where to look. I don't know why but it just makes it way creepier than if it just did a closeup on him looking out the window

  • @Whitnezzi
    @Whitnezzi 7 лет назад +235

    This is one of my favorite horror movies of all time

  • @imperfectimp
    @imperfectimp 2 года назад +29

    Surprisingly good movie. Though the ending is a bit abrupt.
    But still one of the best movie adaptations of Bram Stoker's Dracula I've ever seen.

  • @Redneckkratos
    @Redneckkratos Год назад +6

    Happy 100th anniversary Nosferatu

  • @westnblu
    @westnblu 4 года назад +52

    No CGI no color heck not even any sound yet it has a cinematic atmosphere todays movie studios cannot replicate
    even with bigger budgets and technology. Watching this is more akin to watching a documentary than a movie!

    • @commandixnostalgia2321
      @commandixnostalgia2321 2 года назад

      "Heck not even a sound."
      Duh! It's a silent movie,except for the music.

  • @rod4530
    @rod4530 3 года назад +98

    Incredible, every scene is framed like a painting.

    • @stinkfinga4918
      @stinkfinga4918 2 года назад +8

      Well yeah, this was literally the era where pictures turned into films. So they were still focused on every single shot having the same value as a painting.

    • @winecrimesfoodandtime7119
      @winecrimesfoodandtime7119 2 года назад +2

      It's awesome!

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 2 года назад +3

      Welcome to quality Cinema.

  • @myriadmediamusings
    @myriadmediamusings 2 года назад +4

    Happy 100th Birthday, Nosferatu!

  • @user-up8jx3mt6j
    @user-up8jx3mt6j 3 месяца назад +1

    One-of - if not 'the' first vampire film adaptation, - and in many ways - it
    truly is the best movie about
    Vampires.

  • @connorhoffman7991
    @connorhoffman7991 6 лет назад +97

    I can just imagine them projecting this on a white sheet in the 1930s and some dude sitting at an organ just playing for two hours straight

    • @sleepyysleep
      @sleepyysleep 4 года назад +18

      Connor Hoffman bro that would be so weird, i cant imagine someone sitting on a lung or a heart even

    • @dan-ho1zz
      @dan-ho1zz 4 года назад +10

      Senexe dude he means pipe organs, like an esophagus or something

    • @gracehinahon4137
      @gracehinahon4137 4 года назад +1

      You havent seen a silent movie live. Japan do it every year. They play their band for 2 hrs straight!

    • @HugoMakesMusic
      @HugoMakesMusic 3 года назад +2

      @@gracehinahon4137 I saw a Chaplin film at the Ojai music festival a while back, it was incredible to see the orchestra and especially the pianist work so hard!

    • @gracehinahon4137
      @gracehinahon4137 3 года назад

      @@HugoMakesMusic totally! What a great talent right?

  • @zubrycky
    @zubrycky 3 года назад +71

    Today, February 17, 2021, this masterpiece turns 99.

  • @kel9361
    @kel9361 2 года назад +13

    So many horror films today don't measure up to this. This is truly terrifying. The music, the shadows and the fact at it was made 100 years ago makes it all the more scary.

  • @Cincinnatus1869
    @Cincinnatus1869 2 года назад +10

    the whole part about the sailors and the strange ' plague' afflicted voyage with the rats and the ghostly Vampyre appearing in the ships hold really grabbed my imagination as a kid. I loved the whole idea of it and still do. I pretty much plagiarized that part for a creative writing short story project in the 3rd grade and got praised for imagination. The teacher was none the wiser.

  • @bigwilly1850
    @bigwilly1850 3 года назад +72

    I like how count Orlok isn't even taken down by the protagonist and he just dies because of his own dumbass planning skills, like he goes out to suck her blood like five minutes before the sun comes up

    • @partylizard8343
      @partylizard8343 2 года назад +18

      It is shown by the finger cut scene that he has a nigh uncontrollable lust for blood, which I assume is why the blood has to come from a "pure of heart woman" because that blood is the only one that causes him to ignore the time

    • @faitharmstrong3188
      @faitharmstrong3188 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for the spoilers numbnuts

    • @bigwilly1850
      @bigwilly1850 Год назад +4

      ​@@partylizard8343 Yeah that makes so much more sense I didn't even think of that