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Robert Eggers’ remake of the horror classic is an all-encompassing psychosexual nightmare — and the bursting bodices only add to the film’s fever pitch.
While Muranu’s 1922 “Nosferatu” also had an erotic edge, Eggers goes all-in with his psychosexual nightmare — and Muir’s sweat-soaked nightgowns and bursting bodices only add to the film ...
Based on the 1922 film Nosferatu: A Symphony Of Horror and Bram Stoker's Dracula, Robert Eggers's new film sees Bill Skarsgard transform into vampire Count Orlok in a nod to classic cinema.
By side part, I refer to the iconic hairstyles in the film that simultaneously defy all sense of historical logic and firmly anchor “Nosferatu” as a product of the early 1920s.
In director Robert Eggers’ latest film, “Nosferatu,” the year is 1838, and the ancient Translyvanian vampire has been tainting Ellen’s dreams with psychosexual nightmares since she was a ...