Thanks to Nosferatu 's success, Eggers' career box office has passed the $150 million milestone domestically, and the $260 million mark worldwide. Nosferatu accounts for roughly half this global figure.
Robert Eggers' 'Nosferatu' will screen in 35mm at Film at Lincoln Center as part of the "Conjuring 'Nosferatu': Robert Eggers Presents" program.
Robert Eggers and Lily-Rose Depp on the set of Nosferatu. Photo: Aidan Monaghan/Focus Features And yet it has already become Eggers’s most financially successful movie, making $135 million globally and becoming a plausible contender in Oscar categories that seldom make room for horror.
It is a relief that acclaimed director Robert Eggers wants to make an original movie and not another adaptation after the success of Nosferatu.
The anglophile American film director discusses his ultra-gothic, jumpscare-filled reworking of the ultimate vampire movie
Death and desire collide with seductive, shivering power in Robert Eggers ’ “ Nosferatu ,” a grandly Gothic reinterpretation of F.W. Murnau’s silent-film classic that channels the dark, psychosexual energies at the core of vampire mythology into a haunting tale of obsession.
Nosferatu”—starring Bill Skarsgård and Lily-Rose Depp—is in theaters but will next arrive on digital streaming. How soon will it be before you can watch the movie at home?
If you as a viewer were in recent times enthralled by Robert Eggers’ adaptation of a new and contemporary take on the gothic film – Nosferatu, a film that has been around for years and years, here are five must-watch films that carry a similar gothic charm.
Nosferatu employed 2,000 rat actors. You know what they say — it takes a village (of rats). Speaking with Vulture, Eggers estimated that his production used 2,000 live rats. In some more populated shots, CG scans of living, breathing rats helped fill the background.
The latest adaptation of the silent film classic evokes anxieties at once eternal and contemporary, using one of horror’s ur-texts to dissect race, sex, and power.
Nosferatu director Robert Eggers has revealed that he once started working on a movie adaptation of Frankenstein, but stopped after two weeks.
Director Robert Eggers and actor Willem Dafoe have definitely found a common denominator. The duo are now working together for the third time - and they are also one heart and one soul in the interview.