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Monday, January 9, 2012

Nosferatu at 90: Still the Greatest Vampire Film Ever Made

Greetings, and welcome to the first edition of a brand new year-long series here in The Vault of Horror. For me, dear readers, the year 2012 means only one thing--and that's the 90th anniversary of one of horror cinema's true unassailable classics, F.W. Murnau's Nosferatu. It's hard to fathom that this film is almost a century old, and even more impressive is its continued ability to shock and terrify no matter how much time passes. Just as I did in years past with A Nightmare on Elm Street, Psycho and An American Werewolf in London, I'll be posting throughout the next 12 months on this, the first and greatest of all Dracula adaptations.

How is it that this film still can effect us so profoundly, when so much of horror's power is drawn from the unexpected? One would think that age would be the death knell of a great horror movie, and yet films like Nosferatu prove this to be dead wrong. Whether you're discovering it for the first time all these decades later, or watching it for the 90th time, Nosferatu has the power to utterly creep you out. Personally, I credit it to the merits of German Expressionism.

And Murnau was undoubtedly one of the pioneers of this form of cinema, cutting edge for its time and a far cry from the American, Hollywood style that would soon dominate filmmaking in the years to come. Make no mistake, the silent era of film belonged to the Europeans, and the Germans, in particular, in addition to the Russians and the French, certainly left their mark. Like the best of his peers, Murnau achieved that defining goal of Expressionism in all its forms, namely to evoke pure emotion through the visual medium. Expressionistic works are in a sense dreams brought to life, and in the case of Nosferatu, that dream is most decidedly a nightmare.

The film oozes atmosphere from beginning to end, and is jam-packed with iconic imagery that has stood the test of time for a reason. Interestingly enough, it also set a standard for vampire films, and Dracula adaptations in particular, that was not really followed (at least not for many years). Nosferatu stands out on its own as a unique and truly cinematic retelling of the Dracula story, with liberal license taken, of course. It is vastly different from the Hamilton Deane and John Balderston play that would first be staged two years after its release--the version which inspired Universal's famous talkie version with Bela Lugosi at the start of the next decade.

Nosferatu chooses a different path, eschewing the nascent sex appeal of the vampire to take a more traditional, folkloric approach. The vampire here is still in his repulsive, pre-modern form--there is nothing at all sexy or alluring about Count Orlok (Unless you're into that sort of thing. Who am I to judge?) If anything, the vampire here is a metaphor for plague, and even possesses certain undeniable anti-Semitic overtones (but that's a post for another day).

Still, the story is undeniably Bram Stoker's. So much so that Stoker's widow and her crack legal team nearly had the film eradicated from the face of the earth (another post for a later day). Thankfully for film lovers everywhere, Ms. Stoker was not successful in her efforts, and the movie remains extant to this day for new generations of horror fans to discover and relish. There are many horror classics that stand the test of time, but few are as truly timeless as this one, defying changing filmmaking styles and changing filmgoing tastes to remain a favorite of genre fans. It is just as fresh now as it was when it emerged from a Germany still reeling from the First World War.

In addition to its Expressionistic roots, or perhaps in connection to them, I have always found that the film retains so much power largely because it is so visual in nature. Of course, this was very much necessary due to the limitations (or some might say advantages) of silent cinema, in that the visual was the easiest and most effective way to get your message across. Later versions of Dracula--and indeed horror films in general of the next couple of decades--would rely less on imagery and more on dialogue and cerebral scares. This is not to say that Nosferatu is not a psychologically frightening film, but I would submit that more of the terror it inspires is derived from the direct impact of what we see on screen. It is not so much suspenseful as it is downright terrifying to look at.

As has been the case throughout most of film history, America has been resistant to foreign films, and so this film did not even have a chance to be released here when it first was made in 1922. In fact, it wasn't until the 1960s, many years after a single surviving print had made its way to these shores in defiance of a court order, that it began to attain the cult following in the U.S. that it now enjoys. I have had the privilege of witnessing Nosferatu on the big screen with live musical accompaniment not once, but twice. And although I had my gripes with both viewings (an ironic, snarky crowd the first time out; and wholly inappropriate music the second time), I still consider myself fortunate to have had the experience.

At the time, Nosferatu was largely overshadowed by the Universal Dracula, and later the Hammer Dracula of the 1950s-70s, and yet its interesting to note that nowadays, most horror fans would place Max Schreck right alongside Bela Lugosi and Christopher Lee as one of the screen's iconic Counts. In fact, many vampire aficionados--including this one--will still argue that Nosferatu, the original vampire film, remains the very best to this day. A puzzling notion maybe, in that nobody has been able to top it in 90 years; and yet instead of bemoaning the state of vampire cinema for the past century, I will choose instead to celebrate the fact of Nosferatu's existence. And if it so pleases you, I invite you to join me in doing so for the remainder of 2012.

18 comments:

Maggie Kay said...

Very well written article! I look forward to reading more about it throughout the year. Have you seen "Shadow of the Vampire" (2000)?

B-Sol said...

I certainly have, and enjoyed it quite a bit. Perhaps that film that can even be the subject of a future N@90 post...

Ornery Owl of Naughty Netherworld Press and Readers Roost said...

If I'm not mistaken, Bela Lugosi was the original seductive vampire. There were many appealing vampires to follow. And then they started sparkling. Sigh...
Amazing post--lots of great insight and history here!

said...

A great article about a great film, there will never be a vampire as creepy as Count Orlock. The remake was good but it in no way captured the magic of the original.

(Here's hoping Michael Bay doesn't try to remake it...)

Wings1295 said...

Great post and, I am sure, a great beginning to a wonderful series! Can't believe it is 90 years old! Amazing film. Creepiest vampire ever!

B-Sol said...

Lugosi's Dracula is pretty much considered the beginning of the vampire as a sensual and attractive being. Let's not talk about the sparkling...
Al, thanks, and I agree about the remake. A very good movie, but the original is still the best.
Keep reading, Joe--I'm just getting warmed up!

said...

Uhm... what?

Wings1295 said...

Are those last two comments are a sad attempt at some joke?

B-Sol said...

My apologies. Those two comments were unfortunately a blog troll's idea of a clever joke. Moving right along!

Dr. Theda said...

I have made more than a few posts on this Great Film and about Orlock himself... the 1979 remake was "good" but not "great"....Salems Lot came the closest to this vampire..... "Shadow of the Vampire" was pretty good as well ( I own a "Silver Screen" edition of the 12 inch Shideshow Nosferatu for my collection)... keep up the great posts....the Doctor

mwilliams1220 said...

Great appreciation for an over-looked movie. I recently watched it and enjoyed Murnau's amazing visual style. Shots like the procession of coffins down the empty streets have are beautifully eerie, effect, which is even greater when one thinks about its age. I am also looking forward to your next Nosferatu post!

B-Sol said...

I did enjoy the Nosfertu remake quite a bit, and I'd even be open to a new version, if only for how vastly films have changed in the past 90 years. But agreed, the original will always be the best.
Thanks Michael, keep checking, I'll have the second installment up soon!

Keir said...

I was able to see the film a couple of months ago in the town cinema here in Freising, Germany. I've seen the film a number of times in various incarnations, but have to say I kept looking at my watch. Some very profound scenes (especially the coffins being led out of town) and the idea of the film itself produced at the very start of the doomed Weimar experiment after the horror of the Great War, but much was either hokey or terribly-paced. Still, it beats the 1931 version hands-down.

B-Sol said...

We'll have to agree to disagree Keir--this film still packs a hell of a punch for me. It's just dripping with atmosphere, and yes, more effective than the 1931 Hollywood version (which I also love).

Ace89 said...

A friend of mine once asked me what I thought was the best vampire movie and with little hesitation I answered, "Nosferatu."
Your piece says it all; Murnau's film is a masterpiece of German Expressionism.

B-Sol said...

Perhaps THE masterpiece of German Expressionism.

Anonymous said...

This is HerrSchreck from over at Schreckbabble... and what's interesting. although you say that NOS never made it to.American screens, is the fact that at least one print made it into the hands of universal studios, at least by the mid 1930's. If you watch a comedy short from the studio called BOO! you'll see lots of footage from Murnaus film in it, along with the Frankenstein monster viz their 1931 classic, as well as their sound remake of Leni'CAT AND THE CANARY, THE CAT CREEPS.

I wonder if these scenes from NOS would have been totally unfamiliar to audiences, if the film truly never made it here..

B-Sol said...

Since beginning this series, I've learned that the film did in fact play in very limited release in 1929 in New York and Detroit, and that a print was used as reference by Universal Studios during the making of their 1931 Dracula.

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