USA Today - 01/27/1993
"...[A] silent masterpiece..."
Entertainment Weekly - 01/12/2001
"...The bloodsucker flick that sired them all..."
Chicago Sun-Times - 09/28/1997
"...NOSFERATU inspired dozens of other Dracula films, none of them as artistic or unforgettable..."
Total Film - 09/01/2000
"...A genius of silent cinema, Murnau uses a range of primitive but still startling techniques..."
Sight and Sound - 04/01/2001
"...[A] classic..."
Premiere - 12/01/2003
"...Haunting....The nightmarish appearance of Max Schreck as history's favorite vampire remains an indelible image of horror..."
Empire - 01/01/2008 5 stars out of 5 -- "[E]ven across the oceans of time since it was made, it still creeps you out like very few creature features have ever done."
Uncut - 01/01/2008 4 stars out of 5 -- "[The film] remains the template of vampire cinema....Max Schreck still registers as one one of the eeriest ghouls of horror cinema."
Product Description:
F.W. Murnau's German silent classic is the original--and some say most frightening--DRACULA adaptation, taking Bram Stoker's novel and turning it into a haunting, shadowy dream full of dread. Names had to be changed from the novel when Stoker's wife charged his novel was being filmed without proper permission. Running times vary depending upon versions of the film. Count Orlok, the rodentlike vampire frighteningly portrayed by Max Schreck, is perhaps the most animalistic screen portrayal of a vampire ever filmed. The design was copied by Werner Herzog in his 1979 remake and by Tobe Hooper for his telefilm of Stephen King's SALEM'S LOT that same year. NOSFERATU is an eerie, menacing film that should not be missed.
Film Collectors & Archivists: Alpha Video is actively looking for rare and
unusual pre-1943 motion pictures, in good condition, from Monogram, PRC,
Tiffany, Chesterfield, and other independent studios for release on DVD. We
are also interested in TV shows from the early 1950s. Share your passion
for films with a large audience.
Let us know what you have.