"TITTER YE NOT"
********************
Why is it a bad thing to tell Vampires to get a life?
Because they might take Yours.
*********************
A vampire bat flies back into his cave after a big night out and he has
blood all over his face.
He perches himself on
the roof to try and get some
rest.
But before too long the other bats smell the blood, and start to gather around him.
They ask feverishly where did he get the blood from.
Knowing that they will not let up till he tells them, he says "OK, follow me!".
He flies out of the cave,
across a valley, over a river
into a dark forest. Deep in
the forest he stops, all the
other bats gather round in
an excited frenzy.
"OK", he says, "see that big oak tree over there?".
"Yeah, yeah" reply the other bats, drooling in anticipation.
"WELL I FUCKING DIDN'T!"
*****************************
How many goths does it take to change a light bulb?
None, the lights wouldn't be on anyway.
*****************************
Max Schreck as the vampire
Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens (translated as
Nosferatu:
A Symphony of Horror; or simply Nosferatu) is a
1922 German Expressionist horror film, directed by F. W.
Murnau, and starring Max Schreck as the vampire Count
Orlok. The film, was shot in 1921 and released in 1922, it 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").
Stoker's heirs sued over the adaptation, and a court ruling
ordered that all copies of the film be destroyed.
However, a few prints of Nosferatu survived, and the film came
to be regarded as an influential masterpiece of cinema. As of
2015, it is Rotten Tomatoes' second best - reviewed horror film
of all time.
Thomas Hutter lives in the fictitious German city of Wisborg.
His employer, Knock, sends Hutter to Transylvania to visit a
new client named Count Orlok. Hutter entrusts his loving wife Ellen to his good friend Harding
and Harding's sister Annie, before embarking on his long journey. Nearing his destination in
the Carpathian mountains, Hutter stops at an inn for dinner. The locals become frightened by
the mere mention of Orlok's name and discourage him from traveling to his castle at night,
warning of a werewolf on the prowl.
The next morning, Thomas Hutter takes a coach to a high mountain pass, but the coachmen
declines to take him any further than the bridge as nightfall is approaching. A black-swathed
coach appears after Hutter crosses the bridge and the coachman gestures for
him to climb aboard. Hutter is welcomed at the castle by Count Orlok. When
Hutter is eating dinner he accidentally cuts his thumb, Orlok tries to suck the
blood out, but his repulsed guest pulls his hand away.
Hutter wakes up to a deserted castle the morning after and notices fresh
puncture wounds on his neck, which he attributes to mosquitoes or spiders.
That night, Orlok signs the documents to purchase the house across from
Hutter's own home. Hutter writes a letter to his wife and gets a coachman to
send it. Reading a book about vampires that he took from the local inn, Hutter
starts to suspect that Orlok is Nosferatu, the "Bird of Death." He cowers in his
room as midnight approaches, but there is no way to bar the door. The door opens by itself and Orlok enters, his true nature finally revealed, and Hutter falls unconscious. The next day, Hutter explores the castle. In its crypt, he finds the coffin in which Orlok is resting dormant. Hutter becomes horrified and dashes back to his room. Hours later from the window, he sees Orlok piling up coffins on a coach and climbing into
the last one before the coach departs. Hutter escapes
the castle through the window, but is knocked
unconscious by the fall and awakes in a hospital.
When he is sufficiently recovered, he hurries home.
Meanwhile, the coffins are shipped down river on a
raft. They are transferred to a schooner, but not
before one is opened by the crew, revealing a
multitude of rats. The sailors on the ship get sick one
by one; soon all but the captain and first mate are
dead. Suspecting the truth, the first mate goes below
to destroy the coffins. However, Orlok awakens and
the horrified sailor jumps into the sea.
Unaware of his danger, the captain becomes Orlok's
latest victim when he ties himself to the wheel. When
the ship arrives in Wisborg, Orlok leaves
unobserved, carrying one of his coffins, and moves
into the house he purchased.
The next morning, when the ship is inspected, the
captain is found dead. After examining the ships logbook, the doctors assume they are dealing with the plague. The town is stricken with panic, and people are warned to stay inside.
NOSFERATU TRAILER
Phantom der Nacht
Rarely seen close up's of Max Schrek
in and out of make-up.
There are many deaths in the town, Knock, who had been committed to a psychiatric ward, he escapes after murdering the warden. The towns people give chase, but he manages to escape again.
Against her husband's wishes, Ellen had read the book he found. The book claims that the way to defeat a vampire is for a woman who is pure in heart to distract the vampire with her beauty all through the night. She opens her window to invite him in, but faints. When Hutter revives her, she sends him to fetch Professor Bulwer. After he leaves, Orlok comes in. He becomes so engrossed drinking her blood that he forgets about the coming day. When a rooster crows, Orlok vanishes in a puff of smoke as he tries to flee.
Ellen lives just long enough to be embraced by her grief-stricken husband. The last scene shows Count Orlok's ruined castle in the Carpathian Mountains, symbolising the end of Count Orlok's reign of terror.
The studio behind Nosferatu, Prana Film, was a short-lived silent-era German film studio founded in 1921 by Enrico Dieckmann and Alb Grau, named for the Buddhist concept of prana. Its intent was to produce occult and supernatural themed films. Nosferatu was the only production of Prana Film as it declared bankruptcy in order to dodge copyright infringement suits from Bram Stoker's widow. Grau had the idea to shoot a vampire film; the inspiration arose from Grau's war experience:
in the winter of 1916, a Serbian farmer told him that his father was a vampire and one of the Undead. Diekmann and Grau gave Henrik Galeen the task to write a screenplay inspired from Bram Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula, despite Prana Film not having obtained the film rights. Galeen was an experienced specialist in Dark romanticism; he had already worked on Der Student von Prag (The Student of Prague) in 1913, and the screenplay for Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam (The Golem:
How He Came into the World) (1920). Galeen set the story in a fictional north German harbour town named Wisborg and changed the character names. He added the idea of the vampire bringing the plague to Wisborg via rats on the ship. He left out the Van Helsing vampire hunter character. Galeen's Expressionist style screenplay was poetically rhythmic, without being so dismembered as other books influenced by literary Expressionism, such as those by Carl Mayer. Lotte Eisner described Galeen's screenplay as "voll Poesie, voll Rhythmus" ("full of poetry, full of rhythm").
Filming began in July 1921, with exterior shots in Wismar.
A take from Marienkirche's tower over Wismar
marketplace with the Wasserkunst Wismar served as the
establishing shot for the Wiborg scene. Other locations
were the Wassertor, the Heiligen-Geist-Kirche yard and
the harbour.
In Lübeck, the abandoned Salzspeicher served as
Nosferatu's new Wisborg house, the one of the church
yard from Aegidienkirche served as Hutters and down
the Depenau coffin bearers bore coffins. Many walks of
Lübeck took place in the hunt of Knock, who ordered
Hutter in the Yard of Füchting to meet the earl.
Further exterior shots followed in Lauenburg, Rostock
and on Sylt. The exteriors of the film set in Transylvania
were actually shot on location in northern Slovakia,
including the High Tatras, Vrátna Valley, Orava Castle, the Váh River, and Starhrad.
The team filmed interior shots at the JOFA studio in Berlin's Johannisthal locality and
further exteriors in the Tegel Forest. For cost reasons, cameraman Fritz Arno Wagner
only had one camera available, and therefore here was only one original negative. The
director followed Galeen's screenplay carefully, following handwritten instructions on
camera positioning, lighting, and related matters. Never the less Murnau completely rewrote 12 pages of the script, as Galeen's text was missing from the director's working script. This concerned the last scene of the film, in which Ellen sacrifices herself and the vampire dies in the first rays of the Sun. Murnau prepared carefully; there were sketches that were to correspond exactly to each filmed scene, and he used a metronome to control the pace of the acting.
The original score was composed by Hans Erdmann to be performed by an orchestra during the projection. However, most of the score has been lost, and what remains is only a reconstitution of the score as it was played in 1922. This is why so many composers and musicians have written or improvised their own soundtrack to accompany the film. For example, James Bernard, composer of the soundtracks of many Hammer horror films in the late 1950s and 1960s, has written a score for a reissue.
NOSFERATU by
F.W. Murnau
Nosferatu the Vampire
inspired by Dracula
The story of Nosferatu is similar to that of Dracula and retains the core characters—
Jonathan and Mina Harker, the Count, etc.—but omits many of the secondary players,
such as Arthur and Quincey, and changes all of the characters' names (although in
some recent releases of this film, which is now in the public domain in the United
States but not in most European countries, the written dialogue screens have been
changed to use the Dracula versions of the names).
The setting has been
transferred from Britain in the
1890s to Germany in 1838.
In contrast to Dracula, Orlok
does not create other vampires,
but kills his victims, causing the town folk to blame the plague, which ravages the city. Also, Orlok must sleep by day, as sunlight would kill him, while the original Dracula is only weakened by sunlight.
The ending is also substantially different from that of Dracula. The count is ultimately destroyed at sunrise when the "Mina" character sacrifices herself to him. The town called "Wisborg" in the film is in fact a mix of Wismar and Lübeck.
Shortly before the premiere, an advertisement campaign was placed in issue 21 of the magazine Bühne und Film, with a summary, scene and work photographs, production reports, and essays, including a treatment on vampirism by Albin Grau. Nosferatu's preview premiered on the 4th of March 1922 in the Marmorsaal of the Berlin Zoological Garden. This was planned as a large society event entitled Das Fest des Nosferatu (Festival of Nosferatu), and guests were asked to arrive dressed in Biedermeier costume. The cinema premiere itself took place on the 15th of March 1922 at Berlin's Primus-Palast.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Love song for Nosferatu
Nosferatu brought the director Murnau reinforced into the public eye, especially since his film Der brennende Acker (The Burning Soil) was released a few days later. The press reported extensively on Nosferatu and its premiere. With the laudatory votes, there was also occasional criticism that the technical perfection and clarity of the images did not fit the
horror theme.
The Film Kurier of the 6th of March 1922 said that the vampire appeared too corporeal and brightly lit to appear genuinely scary. Hans Wollenberg described the film in photo-Stage No. 11 of the 11th of March 1922 as a "sensation" and praised Murnau's nature shots as "mood-creating elements." In the Vossische newspaper of the 7th of March 1922, Nosferatu was praised for its visual style.
This was the only Prana Film; the company declared bankruptcy after Stoker's estate, acting for his widow, Florence Stoker, sued for copyright infringement and won. The court ordered all existing prints of Nosferatu burned, but one purported copy of the film had already been distributed around the world. These prints were duplicated over the years, kept alive by a cult following, making it an example of an early cult film.
The movie has received overwhelmingly positive reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes it has a "Certified Fresh" label and holds a 97% "fresh" rating based on 60 reviews. It was ranked twenty-first in Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films of World Cinema" in 2010. In 1997, critic Roger Ebert added Nosferatu to his list of The Great Movies, writing:
Here is the story of Dracula before it was buried alive in clichés, jokes, TV skits, cartoons and more than 30 other films. The film is in awe of its material. It seems to really believe in vampires. Is Murnau's "Nosferatu" scary in the modern sense? Not for me. I admire it more for its artistry and ideas, its atmosphere and images, than for its ability to manipulate my emotions like a skillful modern horror film. It knows none of the later tricks of the trade, like sudden threats that pop in from the side of the screen. But
Nosferatu" remains effective:
It doesn’t scare us, but it haunts us.
In popular culture:
The 1977 song "Nosferatu" from the album Spectres by American rock band Blue Öyster Cult is directly about the film.
Nosferatu was the 1979 album by the Stranglers' Hugh Cornwell's musical collaboration with Robert Williams, who was a drummer in Captain Beefheart's Magic Band. The album cover features a still from F.W. Murnau's 1922 film of the same
name, with the album styled as a soundtrack to the Film. The album is dedicated to the memory of Max Schreck.
In 1979, Werner Herzog's tribute film Nosferatu the Vampyre starred Klaus Kinski (as Count Dracula, not Orlok).
In 1989, French progressive rock outfit Art Zoyd released Nosferatu on Mantra Records. Thierry Zaboitzeff and Gérard Hourbette composed the pieces, to correspond with a truncated version of the film then heavily in circulation in the public domain.
The 2000 satirical film Shadow of the Vampire, directed by E. Elias Merhige and written by Steven A. Katz, is a fictionalized
account of the making of Nosferatu. It stars John Malkovich and Willem Dafoe.
In 2009, Louis Pecsi wrote and illustrated the graphic novel Nosferatu:
The Untold Origin, which gives an origin story to
Count Orlock.
In 2010, the Mallarme Chamber Players of Durham, North Carolina, commissioned composer Eric J. Schwartz to compose an experimental chamber music score for live performance alongside screenings of the film, which has since been
performed a number of times.
In 2012, scenes from the film were used in the exhibition Dark Romanticism at the Städel in Frankfurt as an example to illustrate the way in which ideas developed in 18th- and 19th-century art, influenced story telling and aesthetics in 20th- century cinema.
The Book of the Vampires
Nosferatu drinks the blood of the young, the blood necessary to his own existence. One can recognize the
mark of the vampire by the trace of his fangs on the victim's throat.
The material on this site does not necessarily reflect the views of What If? Tees.
The Images and Text are not meant to offend but to Promote Positive Open Debate and Free Speech.
The material on this site does not reflect the views of What If? Tees.
The Images and Text are not meant to offend but to Promote Positive Open Debate and Free Speech.