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Werner Herzog - Nosferatu 1/2 (Making of)

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Uploaded by on Sep 13, 2008

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Nosferatu the Vampyre (Ger. Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht, Eng. Nosferatu: Phantom of the Night) is a 1979 West German horror film, set primarily in nineteenth-century Wismar, Germany and Transylvania, Romania. The film was conceived as a stylistic remake of the 1922 German Dracula adaptation, Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens. Written and directed by Werner Herzog, Nosferatu the Vampyre stars Klaus Kinski as Count Dracula, Isabelle Adjani as Lucy Harker and Bruno Ganz as Jonathan Harker. The film also features French artist-writer Roland Topor as Renfield.

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  • That's SHADOW OF THE VAMPIRE.

    Great movie about the "making" of the original silent version with John Malkovich as F.W. Murnau and Willem Dafoe as the actor Max Schreck who is not only the vampire of the film, but one in real life known only by the director.

    Wonderful movie. Highly recommended!

  • GANZ KRASSER TYP

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All Comments (29)

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  • He doesn't gave a permit to film? Good for him! :D

  • Twilight crew members and fans...learn what the true definition of vampire is...and what the art of filmmaking can unravel.

  • @TheEvilelvis89 I'm looking at doing my own spin off it. All I feel comfortable saying is that it will be at best based off this version of the vampire, ie my own plot and stuff.

  • "extras always look like extras, but this way they look like people who work"

  • @lyriz465 it NOT Shadow of the Vampire its

    "Nosferatu-Phantom der Nacht" a Remake of "Nostferatu-eine Symphonie des Grauen" and the Vampire is Klaus Kinski not Willem Dafoe

  • @steptocarpus Yes- that is where I got the information from- there is a quite informative documentary by Werner Herzog, who was a close friend of Klaus'. He tried to explain that Klaus had a problem in expressing and filtering his emotions in an appropriate way. According to Herzog he had a great deal of "heartwarmth" and compassion for other people but he was lost in the depth and confusion of his emotions. Though he must have been a quite exhausting and difficult person I guess, I like him :-)

  • @009firefox I have read and heard comments from Werner Herzog to find that to be true as well. I really like the scenery in this film, T

  • @steptocarpus He also had very gentle and heartwarming features but people like to see things in extremes and so it was more sensational to show him in situations where he was angry and mad at people.

  • Gran película. Se la recomiendo a mi hija ELISA MAXIMILIANE BARON OVALLE, dijo JORGE ALBERTO BARON desde Bogotá, Colombia, Suramérica

  • I love Werner Herzog's films! They don't have the sense of separation that you feel when you're watching a normal film, they are completely absorbing and make you feel like you're literally there experiencing the world he has created. The faces of the people he casts are so unusual and remarkable and add to the sense of time period. And Kinski just destroys my soul.

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