After a night of watching Nosferatu, Janice awakes from uneasy dreams. Please watch this movie with headphones or at maximum volume… Enjoy! Brought to you by Ariella Trotsenko, Janice Fong, and Mariana Gurevich … Continue reading
Tag Archives: Nosferatu
The three motifs I concentrated on for this creative project are shadows, change, and mystery. My background is a picture I took when the sun was setting in my neighborhood. The change in the color represents, well, change. It is … Continue reading
My animation reflects the elements of female loss of innocence, death, and fear in Nosferatu. The bright yellow daffodils represent purity, not only of Lucy in Nosferatu the play, but also in Nina in the original film. Neither Nina nor … Continue reading
Funny enough, when I first heard about Nosferatu in this class, I thought of an episode of Spongebob. You can watch this scene here. I then learned it was a story about Dracula, a story of which I’m very familiar. … Continue reading
Nosferatu is a fairly well done telling of Dracula. The shots themselves are very pretty, and the music that accompanied the film was very fitting and atmospheric. Anyone that can tolerate the trademark trappings of a very, very old movie … Continue reading
Nosferatu portrayed Bram Stoker’s Dracula pretty well in my opinion. The black and white movie gave me an overall impression of a Tim Burton film, particularly The Corpse Bride.Burton intentionally gives utilizes the black and white, dull coloring to … Continue reading
As soon as I opened up Nosferatu, I cringed. The year 1992 jumped out at me and the sudden black-and-white coloration was a sharp contrast from what I was used to seeing. The graininess of the film due to the lack … Continue reading
To indulge myself, I’ll post the obligatory Spongebob gif everyone is so fond of and primarily the reason most of us had heard of this fellow Nosferatu before. Alright, now that I got that out of the way… This may … Continue reading
For a silent movie, “Nosferatu” stirred a lot of emotion in me. The beginning scene of Count Orlok reading a paper rattled me not only because of his frightening appearance, but his expression seemed sneaky and malicious. One scene that … Continue reading
As a fan of horror movies, I was very curious to finally see Nosferatu. I didn’t expect it to actual scare me, but I was aware the whole time of what elements might have scared an audience in the 1920’s. … Continue reading