an invocation of the sensually gothic    
     
   
 
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June Days 2006
 
1 Jocelyn Montgomery's 'Living Light'
2 Bat's Day in the Fun Park
3 The Ghoulish Gallery
4 Gormenghast: The Tale of Titus Groan
5 Hollywood's Movie Night in the Cemetery
6 Dore's Scenes from the Apocalypse
7 The Horror Films of Bob Clark
8 The Art of Dave Correia
9 A Dark Garden of Corsetted Beauty
10 Betty Page Confidential by Bunny Yeager
11 The Art of Dorian Cleavenger
12 McFarlane's Avenging Lotus Angel
13 Guillermo Del Toro's 'Pan's Labyrinth'
14 The Rare Beauty of the Corpse Flower
15 The Art of Gia Chikvaidze
16 Gotham Public Works
17 The Nightmare
18 Strawberry Hill: the birth of gothic literature
19 The Devil's Interval
20 Straight Into Darkness
21 The Art of J.W. Waterhouse
22 The Marketplace by Laura Antoniou
23 The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari
24 Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror
25 Kushiel's Dart: a s&m sci-fi romance
26 Angel Heart
27 The Golden: vampire gothic
28 Ninja Scroll: sword, sorcery & sex
29 Ghost Ships
30 The Haunted Summer of 1816
1
 
 
June 24, 2006
 


F. W. Murnau's Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror

Nosferatu
Max Schreck as Count Orlok the vampire in F.W. Murnau's Nosferatu

Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau was drawn to theater and drama as a child and studied art history as a college student before the outbreak of World War I, in which he served as a combat pilot in the German Air Force. After the war, he turned to filmmaking, having begun to learn the craft with wartime propaganda films. He had already directed a production of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, experimenting with the expressionist style, when he conceived of an adaptation of the novel Dracula, written 25 years before.

 

Murnau brilliantly cast an experienced stage actor named Maximillian Schreck to play Count Orlok, a very thinly veiled version of Bram Stoker's vampire. Nosferatu remains one of the most faithful adaptations of the Stoker novel, a fact which led Stoker's widow to sue Murnau's studio for copyright infringement. All copies of the film were ordered to be destroyed, and the studio was forced into bankruptcy. A few prints survived, and Nosferatu was eventually recognized as a masterpiece of expressionist horror.

 
 
 
         
           
 
 
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