Nosferatu the Vampyre earns its 8.5 by doing the impossible. It remakes a masterpiece and stands beside it without shame. Werner Herzog set out to honor Murnau’s 1922 silent film, which he considered the greatest film ever made in Germany, and rather than modernize it he deepened it, making a slow, mournful, hypnotic art film about death, loneliness, and longing. Where the original was a horror film, Herzog’s is closer to a tragic poem. The vampire here is not merely frightening. He is the most pitiable monster in the genre, a creature cursed with an eternity he no longer wants.
This is a film of immense beauty and almost unbearable melancholy, and it asks real patience. It moves at the pace of a dream or a funeral. For viewers willing to surrender to it, it is one of the great vampire films. For those wanting fright or momentum, it will be a trial.
Kinski’s Sorrowful Monster
Klaus Kinski plays Count Dracula, and the performance reinvents what the vampire can be. Kinski wears the full Orlok makeup from the original, the bald head, the rat teeth, the long claws, but where Max Schreck’s Orlok was pure predatory menace, Kinski’s Dracula is drowning in sorrow. He is exhausted by immortality, desperate for love he cannot have, longing for the death that is denied him. He is a monster who would give anything to be human, or simply to end.
Kinski plays the Count’s loneliness as the deepest thing about him. In his great scene he tells Jonathan that the absence of love is the most abject anguish, and that time is an abyss for a creature that cannot die. The vampire’s curse is not bloodlust. It is endless solitude. Kinski makes you pity the thing that brings the plague, and the pity is what makes the film extraordinary. This is horror transmuted into tragedy through a single performance.
Herzog’s Hypnotic Beauty
The film is visually stunning in Herzog’s particular way, full of landscapes that feel charged with meaning and sequences that border on the mystical. The journey to the Count’s castle through the Carpathians is rendered as a passage into another world, with real mountains and rivers shot to feel like the edge of the living world. Herzog finds the uncanny in actual places, which gives the film a reality the studio-bound original could not have.
The film’s most famous images come in its plague sequences. When Dracula brings pestilence to the town of Wismar, Herzog stages scenes of eerie, beautiful doom, citizens dancing in the plague-stricken square, coffins carried through empty streets, rats flooding the town. A sequence of well-dressed townspeople holding a banquet in the square as the plague takes them, surrounded by rats and coffins, accepting their fate with strange calm, is one of the most haunting things in any vampire film. Herzog finds beauty in death itself.
The Tragic Triangle
Isabelle Adjani plays Lucy, here the film’s moral center and tragic heroine, and Bruno Ganz plays her husband Jonathan. Adjani, pale and luminous, gives Lucy an otherworldly intensity. She is the only one who understands the true nature of the threat and the only one willing to sacrifice herself to stop it, offering her own blood to keep the Count past the dawn.
The film’s emotional architecture turns Lucy’s sacrifice into something genuinely tragic. She gives her life out of love and duty, and Herzog’s bleak vision refuses to make the sacrifice clean or triumphant. The ending is one of the most pessimistic in the genre, suggesting the evil is not defeated but merely passed on, that the darkness Dracula carried finds a new host and continues. Herzog’s film ends not with victory but with the cold suggestion that the plague of the vampire is eternal and human goodness is not enough to stop it.
The Demands It Makes
This is not an easy film. Herzog’s pacing is glacial, his interest is in mood and meaning rather than plot or scares, and the film moves with the deliberate slowness of a ritual. There are long stretches with little dialogue and less action, scenes that exist purely to establish atmosphere and dread. A viewer expecting a horror film in any conventional sense will be lost, and even admirers of art cinema may find their patience tested in the film’s slower passages.
The slowness is the price of the film’s power. Herzog is after a hypnotic, trancelike state, and he will not rush to get there. The film rewards surrender and punishes resistance. Meet it on its terms, accept its funereal rhythm, and it builds to something overwhelming. Fight it, check the clock, and it will feel interminable. It is a film to be absorbed rather than watched, and that demand is real.
The Verdict
Nosferatu the Vampyre earns its 8.5 as one of the great achievements in vampire cinema and a remake that stands beside its masterpiece source. Werner Herzog transforms Murnau’s horror film into a mournful tragedy, Klaus Kinski reinvents the vampire as the genre’s most pitiable monster, and the film’s hypnotic beauty and bleak vision linger long after it ends. It loses points only for a glacial pace and trancelike rhythm that demand real patience and will defeat anyone not on its wavelength. A slow, sorrowful, gorgeous film that finds tragedy where the original found terror, and one of the most haunting vampire films ever made.
FAQ
Is this a remake of the 1922 Nosferatu?
Yes. Werner Herzog set out to honor Murnau’s silent masterpiece, which he considered the greatest German film ever made. Rather than modernize it, he deepened it, turning the original horror film into a slow, mournful tragedy while keeping the iconic monster design.
How is Klaus Kinski as Dracula?
Extraordinary, and a reinvention of the character. He wears the rat-like Orlok makeup but plays the Count as drowning in sorrow, exhausted by immortality and desperate for the love and death denied him. He makes the monster genuinely pitiable, which is the heart of the film.
Is it scary?
Not in a conventional sense. It is more tragic and hypnotic than frightening, closer to a mournful art film than a horror movie. The dread is atmospheric and the plague sequences are haunting, but the film aims to move and unsettle rather than scare.
Why is it so slow?
Herzog is after a trancelike, ritualistic mood and refuses to rush. The film moves at the pace of a dream or a funeral, with long atmospheric stretches and little conventional action. The slowness is the source of its power but demands real patience from the viewer.
Is it worth watching?
Yes, if you can meet it on its terms. It is one of the most beautiful and haunting vampire films ever made and a rare remake that equals its source by deepening it. Go in expecting a slow, sorrowful tragedy rather than a horror film, surrender to the pace, and it rewards you fully.