Nosferatu SPOILER Review 2024 - Easter Eggs, Ending Explained!

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Nosferatu Spoiler Review today! Beyond The Trailer reaction & movie review! Ending explained! Easter Eggs! 2024! Oscars? Bill Skarsgard! Lily Rose Depp!

Nosferatu Movie Review with SPOILERS today! Beyond The Trailer host Grace Randolph's reaction & review of Nosferatu in 2024 from Robert Eggers! Ending explained! Easter Eggs! Bill Skarsgard as Count Orlok! Lily Rose Depp, Nicholas Hoult, Willem Dafoe! Enjoy this SPOILER breakdown of Nosferatu in 2024 now that you've seen the full movie! And be sure to make Beyond The Trailer your first stop for movie and entertainment news here on YouTube today!

CHAPTER TIMES
Christmas Release - 00:00
Big Movie Energy - 00:43
Journey to Orloks - 1:29
Office Meeting - 1:46
Very Polite - 2:35
Artistic Style - 3:27
Carriage Ride - 4:20
The Castle - 4:54
Aaron Taylor Johnson - 5:42
Ellen Sacrifice - 7:28
Her Origin Story - 8:51
Issue of Consent - 9:47
Lily Rose Depp - 10:26
Leave to the Imagination - 11:25
Bill Skarsgard - 11:52
McBurney and Ineson - 13:49
All Those Rats - 14:16
Eggers Perfection - 14:38
Conclusion - 15:15

Nosferatu SPOILER Review 2024 - Easter Eggs, Ending Explained!

Interact with host & creator Grace Randolph!

#Nosferatu #Horror
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Perhaps it was just me... but Orlok's design is eerily similar to how the portrait of Vlad the Impaler looks. I loved it!

supercoolnothing
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Bill Scarsgard was tasked with portraying the embodiment of death's insatiable hunger for life while also being an ancient Transylvanian nobleman and i'm sorry but he nailed it.
Didn't make an impression? Cmon now, Grace.

Colin-khkp
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The issue of consent is a problem for you in the Dracula story? The whole point is that the vampire is an evil predator. It’s not a toxic romance. It’s predator and his prey.

Dan-sxgl
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Nosferatu is the first movie I’ve ever saw in theaters on Christmas Day (also my bday). The artistry is phenomenal. Aesthetically it looks and feels authentic to the Victorian era. IMO Lilly Rose did a fantastic performance!!
- the journey to Count was my favorite part. The visuals are mesmerizing

GtheS
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One highlight to me was the shadows moving along the wall, an obvious reference to the 1922 film. It was scary then, and 102 years later, a simple trick, it still works.

I thought this film was a brilliant interpretation of the Dracula story. The main weakness is it felt to me as if things were wrapped up a bit quickly -- the revelation that the blessing of the soil in the vampire's coffin would destroy his sanctuary became irrelevant, as instead Orloff simply succumped to his own lust.

djconnel
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I think Bill Skarsgård delivered what Robert Eggers wanted the character Count Orlok to be, he wanted him to be an evil entity! Robert Eggers has said in interviews that he did not want a nuanced and vulnerable Count Orloc, he wanted a terrifying vampire. Bill Skarsgård is a great actor and disappeared into his character Count Orlok.

robertmortimer
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I am still a big fan of Gary Oldman in Bram Stoker’s Dracula. To me, it remains a classic

jonsevilla
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Bill Skarsgård disappearing so completely into the role of Orlok could be seen as an (unintentional?) homage to Max Schreck in the original 1922 film. Schreck was so deep into the role, and so enigmatic off camera, that there were rumors at the time that maybe he was a vampire. They even made a meta-parody based on those rumors in 2000's "Shadow of a Vampire" (coincidentally also starring Willem Dafoe).

gopdogg
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just watched today, and i actually have the oppisite "complaint" about how orlock was portrayed i felt like there were too many clear shots of him that made him feel too much like a man in makeup, i much prefered the blurred out of focus shots of him it added to the 'power' he had, and i did like the initial reveal scene with him in the coffin in his og castle when he stood because he looked so poweful and intimidating

MichaelTargaryen
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She only consented to kill Orlock after realising it was her destiny to end him

Kratos
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Grace, I just want to mention the authenticity and level of thought that went into the Romanian gypsies and Russian sailors. It was a chef’s kiss. They spoke perfect 1800s period appropriate dialect, pronounciation and just absolutely correct historical details. Just amazing work by Eggers.

NikitaAnnenkov
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Thomas going to Count Orlock castle and his time there was my favorite part of the movie. I like how Eggers made that segment seem like a surreal dream state of fear from Thomas experience.

Leonard_Washington
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I still can’t really understand your view of Orlok in this film. He totally felt like a powerful real character in this film, and the scene where he first threatens Ellen very much stood out to me.

ssd
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I still don’t see what you mean about Bill Skarsgard, this was a complete transformation.

Not sure what flourish he could have added to achieve what you mean. If anything I think what he gives this performance is what will lend itself to his future performances.

Since IT, I think his brand has always been able to play ominous figures incredibly.

willis
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To me the idea that Bill Skarsgard and Count Orlock is just an "object "or set piece in the film is what makes it work for me. He doesn't stand out like Pennywise but throughout Nosferatu you consistently feel Orlocks presence, some of the scariest moments for me was when Ellen and Herr Knock keep saying "He's coming", and even that shot of the ship approaching the town, you really feel like he is this inescapable ominous shadow and nowhere is safe. I can't wait to see it again. Also I really want to give a shout out to Emma Corrin who I haven't seen much talk about, but who really manages to do a lot with her amount of screen time.

lachlanw
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It's somewhat alarming that so many people apparently don't know about the fact that this film is based on a 1920's silent film by the same name from F.W. Murnau, which was an unofficial adaptation of the Dracula story by Stoker. I see so many people claiming "it's just a rip-off of Dracula!".... like, yeah, no sh!t sherlock. It's a remake of a film that told the same story (at least in broad strokes). It also explains this weird complaint of "Orlock isn't an active participant in the film" away. In the original flick as well as in the Herzog version, Orlock is more a representation of grand concepts, not an actual, fleshed out character. It's not his purpose to be more developed, he simply represents animalistic "appetite". It's the antithesis to what Coppola achieved with his adaptation of the Dracula story.

BruceWayne-whof
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Finally opened in England, so I get to enjoy this spoiler review! The first scene where Orlok and Nicholas Hault meet to sign the castle deed is one of the best things I’ve ever seen on screen

Amouroso
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She has control in her sacrifice, she is the one who keeps him until dawn, LRD gave a great performance

griseldadominguez
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The only issue I had with the film was it felt a little tooo long at times but over all it was really enjoyable and a great movie going experience

harrismatthew
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Just saw this one this afternoon. I was just consumed by the look, the imagery, the great shots, super gothic, plays with color, the costumes, the story. I really responded to it and had a great time. I had no idea where it was going. I had a great job. The movie haunted me is all the right ways!

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