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1922: How Nosferatu laid the groundwork for gothic cinema. 

One Hundred Years of Cinema
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Nosferatu is maybe the most iconic horror film ever made. It's creepy imagery has cemented it in the public consciousness. In this film essay we will be looking at how the first vampire movie laid the groundwork for the Gothic cinema of Universal and Hammer.
Thanks for watching One Hundred Years of Cinema, I will be writing a video essay about at least one film each year from 1915 onward to track the evolution of film over the last century. Please subscribe and share! Thank you!
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21 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 49   
@sunnydayzie1202
@sunnydayzie1202 8 лет назад
That film is still terrifying. Some freaking horrid scenes in there! cannot imagine seeing it in a darkened theater on a big screen! A great commentary!
@quickman2663
@quickman2663 2 года назад
We're now 100 years from this movie's release, and it's still freaking scary!
@Decrepit_Productions
@Decrepit_Productions 6 лет назад
A bit of trivia. While the survival and availability of silent era films is at best chancy, that Nosferatu exists today is even more miraculous than the norm. Due to legal action by Bram Stoker's widow or estate, all copies of the film were ordered destroyed. If memory serves, a few exported copes managed to escape destruction only because they too hard to track down. (Silent era films were relatively easy to distribute and show worldwide, as without voiced dialogue they needed only new title cards spliced in to be understood.)
@Dominic-Decoco
@Dominic-Decoco 17 дней назад
To add to that, those copies (copy?) that escaped only survived because they ended up overseas in the US, where Dracula was already public domain, and thus out of the reach of the Stokers.
@nosferatu8530
@nosferatu8530 7 лет назад
LOVE your videos. Man, how i am HOOKED on these IMMORTAL timeless horror classics. For years I have been obsessed with "Nosferatu", a true true Masterpiece. Just like "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari", "Der Golem", "Phantom of the Opera" and so on. I just love watching these movies over and over (thank God for the amazing restoration work that has been done on these movie and the gorgeous "Eureka!" bluray releases). I can just ramble on for hours... OH- and don't you just LOVE the new 5.1 soundtrack score for "Nosferatu"? Delicious! Nothing beats those early German and Universal horror movies...
@tomchristie3199
@tomchristie3199 7 лет назад
Great series. You sold me when you rightly pointed out that Nosferatu isn't particularly an expressionist film - this is probably actually the first analysis I've heard, professional critic or otherwise, that hasn't just lumped it in as one.
@JimmyDThing
@JimmyDThing 8 лет назад
Hey man, really love your series. Just a little bit of constructive criticism. I had a little bit of trouble keeping up with you on this one, maybe slow it down a little bit? Pauses between sentences etc. Your videos could be 10+ minutes long and I think your audience would stick with ya.
@onehundredyearsofcinema
@onehundredyearsofcinema 8 лет назад
+JimmyDThing it's always great to get feedback! I will keep that in mind next time. Thank you.
@akiraman26
@akiraman26 8 лет назад
JimmyDThing mabe if you stfu with your twilight bs this was the best first vampire movie ever...
@TeatroGrotesco
@TeatroGrotesco 4 года назад
A suggestion: adjust the speed of the video. It worked for me with a robot reading an audio book, just slowed down a step and I heard it clearly. While another channel has interesting subjects but the guy narrates like an o.d. on ambien so I speed him up a step or two and the intolerable pauses went away. Good luck. Oh and screw deadpool wannabe or whatever. Where did the twilight bs and stfu come from? Jeez.
@everything9137
@everything9137 6 лет назад
Rhe guy from spongebob
@Quicksilverfan69
@Quicksilverfan69 3 года назад
Excellent film and analysis. My favourite Gothic horror probably would this, Nosferatu. And the other which I'm probably not sure if it is "Gothic", but The Phantom Carriage (Swedish horror silent).
@godzillamoraga
@godzillamoraga 2 года назад
I was lucky to see this with an organist performing a musical score for it.
@Owen-ot8qi
@Owen-ot8qi 6 лет назад
Holy shit this is the best quality I’ve seen of Nosferatu
@sarmientoenricomiguelv.562
@sarmientoenricomiguelv.562 2 года назад
I love how the most iconic image in Nosferatu was referenced in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom It made wanna see the film Nosferatu itself.
@TheEightRain
@TheEightRain 8 лет назад
Just found you and now I am exited to watch more. Please keep making these!
@lesgoe8908
@lesgoe8908 Год назад
Excellent overview of this silent classic, but I don't think "W. D. Griffith" (2:40) was as slick a filmmaker as his cousin, W. D. Fortee.
@Bigbadwhitecracker
@Bigbadwhitecracker 3 года назад
It's such a creepy film almost 10 years later. I can't watch it anymore. When you get to 1971, could you PLEASE include Billy Jack?
@pixelchloe4338
@pixelchloe4338 5 лет назад
your chanel is helpful for film student like me. thank you!
@johnpehanich9770
@johnpehanich9770 4 года назад
The number one movie that never fails to scare me
@meepboie4008
@meepboie4008 5 лет назад
Who knows that one scene when he rides a boat to his house? *insert pirates of Caribbean theme here*
@jasonhebedead1710
@jasonhebedead1710 5 лет назад
I'd say my favourite gothic horror film would have to be Robert Wise's The Haunting (1963).
@karuma6635
@karuma6635 5 лет назад
1:06 BRAM STROKER'S DRACULA?!
@alandesouzacruz5124
@alandesouzacruz5124 6 месяцев назад
Masterpiece 🖤
@yonathanasefaw9001
@yonathanasefaw9001 4 года назад
Love this series!
@michaelbruns449
@michaelbruns449 2 года назад
Strange, Ominous, Haunting, Dreadful...
@jackeightman
@jackeightman 6 лет назад
brilliant more films please
@yohannbiimu
@yohannbiimu 3 года назад
You could have easily used other F.W. Murnau films as examples throughout the 1920s. The Last Laugh (1924), Faust (1926), and Sunrise: A Song Of Two Humans (1927), were extraordinary films, each with distinct atmospheres and narratives. To be honest, I think that these three that followed Nosferatu are far better movies all around.
@sundus928
@sundus928 Год назад
How come vampires went from THIS to the *sparkly hot broody sexy* vampires?
@abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz4676
I really want to see some W D Griffith films now lol. I'm just kidding, great channel, subscribed.
@dzonnyblue3065
@dzonnyblue3065 2 года назад
in truth nosferatu is what real vampires look like not typical hollywood crap !
@Editarian
@Editarian 7 месяцев назад
great video. what is the film used at 1:55?
@christianheitmann4922
@christianheitmann4922 2 года назад
Sekunde 50 Der Amazon Zusteller wird sein Paket nicht los.
@Ben_Kirkham
@Ben_Kirkham Месяц назад
What a film! 🤩
@TheMightyPika
@TheMightyPika 8 лет назад
Imgur brought me here!
@thiccboss4780
@thiccboss4780 5 лет назад
4:11 Not Sure where the original citation comes from but here's a similar quote affirmation from James Rolfe with differing facts. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-OMOEAcyFETg.html _Either way i love Freddy and both Orloks as timeless entities of Horror Cinema._ also, good job on your Double Indemnity essay, it was amazing , good luck on the next one and take care out there Charlie, godspeed.
@its_4life
@its_4life 3 года назад
Duuude its the guy from spongebob!!
@juanramirez-wk8ty
@juanramirez-wk8ty Год назад
Great video but I was a bit annoyed to see it repeat and perpetuate an often said misconception, Murnau did not transform the vampire count character from a "suave icon of sexuality into an animalistic beast", in fact it is the other way around. Count Orlock in Nosferatu is a lot closer to the original Count Dracula character in Stoker's book than the latter day "romantic" figures that pop culture has come to identify him with. Dracula in the book is consistently creepy and sinister and at no time does he take on any romantic qualities other than developing a malevolent spiritual hold over Mina as he attempts to "initiate" her into his vampire existence, hardly a "romance' by any stretch of the imagination.
@ajsmith5295
@ajsmith5295 2 года назад
It was a pleasure to hear someone pronounce nosferatu right everytime I hear an American say it they say nose not nos I know he had a big nose but it makes me laugh the way the Americans say nose 4 R2
@DreamsinFrames1899
@DreamsinFrames1899 5 лет назад
Watch the movie in HD here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-bXOvgs7T8HE.html
@monkofdarktimes
@monkofdarktimes 7 лет назад
help me I am trap in his room
@viarnay
@viarnay 3 года назад
the movie is boring as hell and sometimes looks like a comedy when they pretend to be at night and when Nosferatu has to carry his own coffin by hand
@LarryFleetwood8675
@LarryFleetwood8675 2 года назад
You seriously have no understanding of film history or its making. lol
@viarnay
@viarnay 2 года назад
@@LarryFleetwood8675 the snob spoke
@LarryFleetwood8675
@LarryFleetwood8675 2 года назад
@@viarnay You did, did you. You really shouldn't.
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