Much of the credit for this strangeness should go to the producer of Nosferatu, Albin Grau. A student of the occult, he wrote an article claiming that, during World War One, a Serbian peasant had told him of his own encounters with vampires: "Before this wretched war, I was over in Romania," said the peasant, allegedly. "You can laugh about this superstition, but I swear on the mother of God, that I myself knew that horrible thing of seeing an undead... or Nosferatu, as vampires are called over there." In 1921, Grau set up an independent studio, Prana Film, but he also worked closely with Murnau as the designer of Nosferatu. With no earlier vampire films to copy or to react against, Grau had to dream up something new – and his sketches of Orlok, a spindly, demonic alien with glowing eyes, are even creepier than the version in the finished film.
อ่านต่อได้ที่ : โรงเรียนบ้านคลองปราบ
สาระน่ารู้ : คอหอย
โพสต์โดย : mark เมื่อ 5 มี.ค. 2565 18:25:05 น. อ่าน 159 ตอบ 0