Witch Director Robert Eggers Lifelong Obsession with Nosferatu and His Plans For a Remake
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Robert Eggers, the writer/director behind the indie horror hit The Witch, confirmed with IndieWire that his next film will be the remake of Nosferatu for former Warner Bros. President Jeff Robinovs Studio 8. While a guest on IndieWires Filmmaker Toolkit podcast, Eggers said he never intended for his next film to be a remake of the 1922 iconic horror classic by the legendary German director F. W. Murnau. [Its shocking] to me, said Eggers. It feels ugly and blasphemous and egomaniacal and disgusting for a filmmaker in my place to do Nosferatu next. I was really planning on waiting a while, but thats how fate shook out. Eggers history with the vampire story of Count Orlok, played by Max Schreck, goes back a long way. Growing up, he was hooked on classic horror films from Universal and Hammer Studios, not being able to handle the scarier 1980s American films like Nightmare on Elm Street. I saw a picture of Max Schreck as Count Orlok in a book in my elementary school and I lost my mind, said Eggers. Afterward, Eggers made his mother drive to the mall in rural New Hampshire so they could order a VHS of the 1922 classic.Then, when I was 17, I directed the senior play [of] Nosferatu,' said Eggers. It was very expressionist, it was much more expressionist than the film is. It was Cabinet of Dr. Caligari style [German Expressionistic]. A local theater owner saw the high school performance and hired the teenager to re-stage the play professionally. Thats when I realized this is what I want to be doing, said Eggers. Nosferatu has a very close, magical connection for me. Though if I were to make the movie 17-year-old Rob was going to make of Nosferatu it would have been something between like The Nightmare Before Christmas and Sin City, whereas this is going to be the same approach as The Witch, where 1830s Biedermeier Baltic Germany needs to be articulated in a way that seems real. During the podcast, Eggers breaks down how his obsession with history informed the script and look of The Witch,'something he says will continue with the vampire remake. The former production designer explained how capturing the look and feel of the past is a product of the emotional, almost memory-like, images that are evoked for him during his deep research he does in writing scripts. In addition to building real 1830s interiors, another key change will his approach to the lead character of the film. I cant also do Max Schreck again either, so thats fun, so its going back to the origins of the folk vampire, said Eggers, who is also writing the script. |
Robert Eggers Nosferatu
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