วันอาทิตย์ที่ 6 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2552

Shadow of the Vampire

Shadow of the Vampire Review



I love this movie. I have the original Nosferatu and Dafoe nails the character. John Malkovich is outstanding as the obsessed director. I also loved Eddie Izzard and the self-absorbed actor afraid of his own shadow. All the performance truly brought to life the idea of how a film director obsessed with perfection can do the unthinkable and hire a real vampire to play a role. Fabulous and a must see for all fans of these actors, vampires and the great b movies of the 50's. It is a character study any film or stage student should watch.


Shadow of the Vampire Feature



Shadow of the Vampire Overview


Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 06/17/2003 Rating: R

Shadow of the Vampire Specifications


Clever, engaging, and boosted by the sublime casting of Willem Dafoe as Nosferatu actor Max Schreck, Shadow of the Vampire is a film full of good ideas that are only partially developed. Its premise is ripe with possibilities, but the movie's too slight to register much impact, so you're left to relish its delightful performances and director E. Elias Merhige's affectionately tongue-in-cheek homage to a landmark of German silent cinema. John Malkovich is aptly loony as the eccentric director F.W. Murnau, whose passion in filming the 1922 classic Nosferatu leads to the extreme casting of Schreck as the vampire, a vision of evil who, in this movie's delightfully twisted imagination, actually is a vampire, sucking the blood of cast and crewmembers who've dismissed Schreck as an overzealous method actor.

As these on-set maladies and "accidents" continue, Schreck wields greater control over Murnau, who descends into a kind of obsessive art-for-art's-sake madness until diva costar Greta Schroeder (Catherine McCormack, doing wonderful work) is served up as the actor's ultimate motivation. Merhige and his actors (including Cary Elwes, as intrepid cameraman Fritz Wagner) have great fun with this ghastly escapade, and the humor is kept delicately subtle to balance the movie's artistic aspirations. To that end, Dafoe is just right, his bald pate and gaunt features a perfect match for the mysterious Schreck, his grimace and talon-like fingers suggesting a human vulture on the prowl. Likewise, the re-creation of Nosferatu's expressionist style is both fanciful and brilliantly authentic. Too bad, then, that this movie suffers a mild case of vampiric anemia; if it shared the depth and richness of, say, Ed Wood, this might have been a cult classic for the ages. --Jeff Shannon

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