F. W. Murnau’s 1922 horror classic, Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror, is an atypical Dracula adaptation. The departures from Bram Stoker’s epistolary novel were very much intentional to skirt around ...
When Nosferatu hit theaters last year, it meant all the brainless, unoriginal content farmers started digging up any and every possible thing they could to try and capture those sweet SEO targets.
Horror first really took off because of the vampire genre. 1922's Nosferatu and 1931's Dracula changed everything, codifying the main tropes and launching a subgenre that endures until today. In the ...
Max Schreck: Because Dracula had no servants. Albin Grau: I think you missed the point of the book, Count Orlock. Max Schreck: Dracula hasn't had servants in 400 years and then a man comes to his ...
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