يحاول ذهب - حر

With Robert Eggers' 'Nosferatu' in theaters, we examine the small but distinguished filmic legacy of this vampire, an unauthorized version of Dracula but with crucial differences

January 11, 2025

|

Mint New Delhi

With Robert Eggers' "Nosferatu" in theatres, we examine the small but distinguished filmic legacy of this vampire, an unauthorised version of Dracula but with crucial differences

- Gayle Sequeira

Like the now-iconic image of Count Orlok arising from his coffin, Nosferatu has resurrected itself over and over for more than a century of cinematic adaptations, despite an early attempt to drive a stake through its heart.

On discovering that the 1922 silent German Expressionist film (streaming on Plex) was an unauthorized adaptation of author Bram Stoker's Dracula, his widow, Florence, was furious. A years-long legal battle ensued and in 1925, a German court ordered that all copies of Nosferatu, directed by F.W. Murnau, be destroyed.

Luckily, some prints had already made their way over to America, where Dracula was in the public domain. Nosferatu survived, and cinema was all the better for it (Robert Eggers' 2024 version, starring Bill Skarsgård, Nicholas Hoult and Lily-Rose Depp, releases in Indian cinemas this week).

Murnau's eerie undead antagonist, the Transylvanian vampire Count Orlok (Max Schreck), isn't suave or alluring like his counterparts that would eventually come to be associated with the genre—Christopher Lee in the Hammer horror films of the 1950s onwards, or Twilight's Edward Cullen. Instead, Orlok has unusually pointy ears on which tufts of hair sprout, long claw-like fingers, a glassy unblinking stare and two sharp, protruding front teeth.

The image of this pale, inhuman creature sinking his fangs into your neck when you're asleep—a time when you're never more vulnerable—is terrifying.

More than his appearance, however, it's what he represents that makes the terrors so enduring.

The word "Nosferatu" itself is connected to "nosophoros", the Greek word for "disease-bearing". Those bitten by the Count don't transform into vampires, as they do in Stoker's novel. Instead, they die.

المزيد من القصص من Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

'Trade deals can supercharge India'

Trade deals can spark a manufacturing renaissance for India, and a consistent, moderately high annual growth rate of 6%-7.5% over an extended period of time without any macroeconomic instability can transform the country, Franziska Ohnsorge, chief economist, South Asia Region, World Bank, said.

time to read

2 mins

October 06, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Channels bloom as TV biz shrinks

Indian television broadcasters are launching new channels, defying stagnating revenues and advertisers flocking to digital media. Their bet: targeted categories catering to large audience segments are still relevant.

time to read

2 mins

October 06, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Big Auto charts out revival route in hard local market

Foreign firms rush to bring in new models as rivals raise share in slowing market

time to read

3 mins

October 06, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Tata Steel capacity target faces analysts’ scepticism

Beyond Kalinganagar and NINL, company has no announced plans to meet 40mtpa target

time to read

3 mins

October 06, 2025

Mint New Delhi

POLITICAL DRAMA PEAKS IN BIHAR ASSEMBLY RACE

Bihar remains steeped in politics even in the midst of festivities.

time to read

3 mins

October 06, 2025

Mint New Delhi

'Trade deal with US has to respect India's red lines'

Jaishankar says understanding between the two sides is necessary as US is world's largest market

time to read

1 mins

October 06, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Inside Dharwad's blue dot experiment

Dharwad's paradox: The district has over 3,100 MSMEs, generating 8,000-10,000 fresher openings a year. About 2,000 students pass out ifITIs annually. And yet, MSMEs report shortages, while placement rates for youth remain south of 25-30%. The gap isn't supply or demand. It's visibility and trust.

time to read

2 mins

October 06, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Europe’s AI startups look stateside for bigger checks, quicker deals

Within a week of landing in San Francisco, Brandon Abreu Smith had something that had eluded him for months in London: $500,000 in pre-seed funding for his artificial intelligence-based workflow startup, Structured AI.

time to read

4 mins

October 06, 2025

Mint New Delhi

'Premium shift to drive Snapdragon 8 chipset adoption'

Chipset major Qualcomm expects the shift in the Indian market towards the premium device segment will drive adoption of the company's latest and premium smartphone processor Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 in the country.

time to read

1 min

October 06, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Russia remains top oil supplier to India

India's crude oil imports from Russia saw a marginal fall in September but still accounted for over one-third of the nation's total oil purchases, despite US pressure to curb the trade over Russia-Ukraine war concerns.

time to read

1 min

October 06, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size