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Nosferatu

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Nosferatu and Nazism The vampire symbolizes Hitler. Nosferatu leaves his country to spread his power abroad. ... Nosferatu and Painting (German Expressionist Art) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nosferatu


1
Nosferatu
  • Please write for about 10 minutes on the
    following
  • What is your greatest fear and why?


2
First Viewinga bit tedious
  • At first viewing, Murnaus work can seem overlong
    and tedious given how little the modern audience
    is used to silent black and white films with long
    sequences.
  • Yet to liken this Symphony of Horror to a
    vulgar vampire film or the hundredth adaptation
    of Bram Stoker's book Dracula would be a major
    error.

3
Directors Intent
  • Despite its apparent simplicity, the film grows
    in scope in its use of suggestion and different
    degrees that hide behind a simple story that only
    serves as a vehicle for the directors
    intentions.

4
Nosferatu and Nazism
  • The vampire symbolizes Hitler.
  • Nosferatu leaves his country to spread his power
    abroad.
  • His bite makes puppets of his victims, servants
    body and soul to their powerful master, blinded
    fanatics that represent the German people, while
    Knock, his servant abroad, is perhaps comparable
    to a collaborator.
  • The rats the Count brings with him in his boat to
    propagate in the foreign county, carrying with
    them the plague, symbolize the Nazi ideology that
    spreads throughout Europe.
  • Furthermore, this is confirmed when one knows
    that Nazism was also qualified as a black plague
    in its time.

5
Nosferatu and Painting (German Expressionist Art)
  • Themes like ambivalence (subjectivity and the
    unconscious, mystery and imagination) as well as
    he idea of a double, the ambiguous, Gothic, and
    the communion between the artist and nature are
    omnipresent in the film.
  • For the Romantics, portraits, reflections, and
    shadows blend into a single entity.
  • The shadow, particularly important (as in the
    scene as he climbs the stairs), anticipates an
    imminent danger, embodies a sexual desire, and
    always betrays the killer in German cinema.

6
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7
Gothic
  • Primarily an architectural style that prevailed
    in western Europe from the twelfth through the
    fifteenth centuries, characterized by pointed
    arches, ribbed vaults, and flying buttresses,
    that made it possible to create stone buildings
    that reached great heights.

8
Gothic Qualities
  • Gothic qualities are manifested in the physical
    characteristics of the vampire and in the
    architecture.
  • Noseferatus bald oval head reflects the Gothic
    archways of his chateau, while his twisted body
    responds to the curves of the gate.
  • His long nails symbolize the Easts despotism and
    correspond to the elongated lines of Gothic
    architecture. Finally, nature has a preponderant
    role, as important as a character. The stretches
    of land are the mental projections of the
    characters while the waves of the sea announce
    the imminent arrival of the count.

9
Nosferatu and Cinema
  • Orlok's character is record of film's positioning
    facing other arts and in particular painting. The
    vampire is between death (immobility painting is
    a rigid art) and life (movement cinema is an art
    in motion). This duality also represents the
    technical evolution of art, cinema being the
    living form and the most advanced thanks to
    technological progress.

10
Nosferatu and Homosexuality
  • The film conceals allusions homosexuality, taboo
    at that time, and reflects the repressed
    tendencies of the director. Hutter leaves his
    wife for the Count and the dinner scene at the
    chateau resembles a seduction scene where the
    young man succumbs fairly easily. The vampire's
    bite can also be considered as a forbidden kiss
    between two men.

11
Nosferatu and Globalization
  • The film coincides with the beginnings of
    globalization and in particular the investment of
    foreign capital in the local economy. The Count,
    who is obviously a predator, here embodies the
    phenomenon of globalization, at that time
    considered a danger.
  • www.taravangeons.com/yahoo_site_admin/.../Nosferat
    u.28353022.ppt
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