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Nosferatu [Blu-ray]

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Availability: Only 6 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by Mediapolis

Arrives Jul 26 – Jul 30
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Format: Blu-ray November 26, 2013


Description

Directed by F.W. Murnau. Starring G.H. Schnell, Alexander Granach, Gustav von Wangenheim.

Genre: Horror


Format: Import, Blu-ray


Contributor: Guido Herzfeld, Enrico Dieckmann, Wolfgang Heinz, Albert Venohr, Albin Grau, G.H. Schnell, Greta Schroder, Gustav Boltz, Max Nemetz, Julie Corman, Henrik Galeen, Hardy von Francois, John Gottowt, Max Schreck, Greta Schroeder, F. W. Murnau, Gustav Botz, Lynn Whitney, Gustav von Wangenheim, Ruth Landshoff, Georg H. Schnell, Alexander Granach, Karl Etlinger, F.W. Murnau See more


Language: English, German


Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ Unknown


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 0.46 x 6.73 x 5.22 inches; 2.88 ounces


Item model number ‏ : ‎ EKA70115


Director ‏ : ‎ F.W. Murnau, F. W. Murnau


Media Format ‏ : ‎ Import, Blu-ray


Release date ‏ : ‎ November 26, 2013


Actors ‏ : ‎ G.H. Schnell, Greta Schroeder, Gustav Botz, Henrik Galeen, Max Schreck


Subtitles: ‏ ‎ English


Producers ‏ : ‎ Albin Grau, Julie Corman, Enrico Dieckmann, Lynn Whitney


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Jul 26 – Jul 30

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • A comparison of different DVD versions.
NOSFERATU is one of my favourite films of all time, and -- having just bought the Kino Ultimate Edition -- I've just been having one of my periodic binges, to compare different versions. Since the customer reviews for different editions are all jumbled together in a confusing way, I thought others might appreciate hearing some of the pros and cons of the different DVDs. A bit of background. I first saw NOSFERATU on late-night TV around 1980. I had always heard about what a classic it is, and saw that it was finally on. Even at 2am, with a lousy print and interrupted by obnoxious late-night commercials, something about it grabbed me. A few years later, Nosferatu was probably one of the first VHS tapes I bought, in a (then) high-quality edition by Video Film Classics. I started my binge with a DVD I recently made of that VHS tape, just for sentimental reasons. Although later I got better DVD editions, I always liked the orchestral score on the VHS version -- faded though the print was. One problem with so many silent film releases -- especially German Expressionistic ones -- is that they apparently think the best musical accompaniment for silent films is to use music by self-indulgent avant-garde composers determined to be as grating as possible, with the music having as little to do with the mood on the screen as possible. Let me say first off: THANK GOD for Image Entertainment and Kino. Their releases are consistently excellent. The Image DVD is definitely worth having for the completist. Until recently, it may have been the most satisfying. It has a good, appropriate organ accompaniment, as well as a fairly decent modernistic one. The image quality is very good, with a nice job of tinting. Interestingly, whereas my VHS edition was only 60 minutes long, the Image edition is 81 minutes long; yet, I could see absolutely no difference in the sequence of shots and scenes. I can only guess the Image edition is SLIGHTLY slowed down (although the 60 minute one didn't strike me as overly, obviously fast), and that there might have been a slight difference in the timing of the intertitles. I was disappointed in the Image commentary, however, as it sounds like it's by a graduate film student trying to impress his professors. I was hoping for facts about the making of the film, but it is primarily "scholarly" interpretation ... offered with the usual lack of qualification, as if the commenter must educate us lesser beings about the true, objective meaning of the film -- much of which seems laughable and more revealing of the commenter than of the film. For example, he tells us that it is obvious that the hero and his wife are in a passionless, unsatisfying "sexless marriage" -- even though what you're seeing on the screen is that they can't keep their hands off each other. Then we are shown the hero walking down the street. That's it. He's just walking down the street -- but we are assured that he is hurrying "to get away from his wife." What?! The 2004 Kino release has a comparable image quality to the Image release -- very good, with good tinting -- and it is somehow 93 minutes long, again with very little difference in the shots and scene sequences. It is very strange to me. There seem to be a few minor shots included that are left out of the other editions, but many of the old familiar individual shots seem to be held longer, with more at the beginnings and endings. I very much appreciate that, as I feel I'm seeing as much of the film as is historically possible and accurate. The big downer on this edition is the choice of either one obnoxious, grating modernistic score, or another obnoxious, grating modernistic score. The Kino "Ultimate DVD Edition", however, is just that. This is the one to have, if you must only have one. It is the same 93 minute length, but the image quality is even better. Incredible, actually. The restoration, from the only surviving 1922 print, and the tinting are gorgeous. I was seeing detail I've never seen before. But the essential piece: NOSFERATU is finally reunited with its original gorgeous orchestral score, by Hans Erdmann, painstakingly reconstructed and recorded. In style it reminds me often of Beethoven and Berlioz, with some Romanticism and a few disturbingly modernistic, dissonant touches. Watching this release, I feel that I have finally seen NOSFERATU the way it was intended to be seen by Murnau and his collaborators, with no compromises. THANK YOU, Kino. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2014 by Niemann

  • Excellent
A very good movie from the silent film era. I do recommend it.
Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2024 by BigPhil

  • Errie, 1921 horror silent vampire movie still shines with this excellent restoration!
Without ever having seen this movie before the name Nosferatu the vampire and the image of a ratfaced ghoul with very long fingernails, I had seen varoius times before! I knew the image was from an old silent movie. But it's not until recent years in the 21st century that I started to discover german expressionist filmaking in the form of Fritz Lang's METROPOLIS, Lotte Reniger's animated THE ADVENTURES OF PRINCE ACHMED ( see my review of this film on amazon.com) and now NOSFERATU! The creation of the DVD format has led to increased restoration of old movies for the clear DVD and even sharper resolution BLUE RAY formats. Disney's FANTASIA has been restored twice, the 2nd time being the best with a brighter, lighter image so all the detail and backround elements are clearly visible for the first time in decades! And MGM's THE WIZARD OF OZ is eyepopingly beautiful after a 3rd remastering attempt! While NOSFERATU was made on a low budget all of the atmospheric detail of the settings and photographic effects are beautifully restored and it shows on this dvd set! A dvd extra that reveals what went into the restoring and picture enhancing is both impressive and informative. I highly recommend both KINO'S METROPOLIS DVD sets, the 2nd one having more footage discovered, to see more great german expressionist filmaking! Looking at both METROPOLIS, ADVENTURES OF PRINCE ACHMED and NOSFERATU I get the impression the Germans were really ahead of American filmaking in terms of artistry in the 1920s!!NOSFERATU (ultimate 2- disc edition) has the beautifully performed original score made for the film in 1921! The KINO METROPOLIS DVD sets also have the original German composed score for that film and so does THE ADVENTURES OF PRINCE ACHMED have it's original german composed score! All three film titles sound magnicent as a result with crystal clear stereophonic sound on DVD! It's interesting to compare NOSFERATU to Universal's DRACULA starring Bela Lugosi! A comparison of the script of the german silent film with Stoker's book DRACULA reveals that NOSFERATU doesn't use the spoken line " listen to the children of the night, what music they make!" that is in the Stoker novel but Bela Lugosi said that line as Dracula in the Universal DRACULA movie! The DRACULA classic has no music during the film's scences but NOSFERATU has the full blown Hans Erdman score filled with dramatic and errie music chords and when Max Schreck rises from his casket on board the ship headed to Wisborg ( in DRACULA the vampire went to London) the image of Scheck rising up with very long sharp fingernails and his ratlike face really does give one a chill up the spine! One moment I found amusing and fasinating is when Nosferatu single handedly, carries one of his coffins with one arm on a small rowboat to his new creepy mansion! Earlier in the movie Nosferatu, in fast motion places his coffin full of dirt along with other coffins on a wagon drawn by horses and with his magic he makes the lid of the coffin cover himself in his box and then the wagon drives off with NO DRIVER to tell the horses to giddyap! You don't see Bela Lugosi do that!! Nor do you see any of todays teenage vampires do that either! Hutter's wife Ellen sacrifices herself to stop the vampire from destroying Wisborg by letting Nosferatu drain her blood which keeps the vampire occupied while the sun comes up!! Nosferatu has then failed to get back in his box before sunrise so Max Scheck holds his chest with one hand while reaching out the other upwards and then he dissapeared on screen! So no stake in the chest this time! This one is both creepy and classy! Highly recommended! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2014 by Jonhayashi1

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