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Nosferatu, fantôme de la nuit

Titre original : Nosferatu - Phantom der Nacht
  • 1979
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 47min
NOTE IMDb
7,4/10
48 k
MA NOTE
Isabelle Adjani and Klaus Kinski in Nosferatu, fantôme de la nuit (1979)
Theatrical Trailer from 20th Century Fox
Lire trailer2:14
1 Video
98 photos
Horreur folkloriqueHorreur surnaturelleHorreur vampireDrameHorreur

Le comte Dracula quitte la Transylvanie pour se rendre à Wismar, propageant la peste noire dans tout le pays. Seule une femme au coeur pur peut mettre fin à son règne infernal.Le comte Dracula quitte la Transylvanie pour se rendre à Wismar, propageant la peste noire dans tout le pays. Seule une femme au coeur pur peut mettre fin à son règne infernal.Le comte Dracula quitte la Transylvanie pour se rendre à Wismar, propageant la peste noire dans tout le pays. Seule une femme au coeur pur peut mettre fin à son règne infernal.

  • Réalisation
    • Werner Herzog
  • Scénario
    • Werner Herzog
    • Tom Shachtman
    • Martje Grohmann
  • Casting principal
    • Klaus Kinski
    • Isabelle Adjani
    • Bruno Ganz
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,4/10
    48 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Werner Herzog
    • Scénario
      • Werner Herzog
      • Tom Shachtman
      • Martje Grohmann
    • Casting principal
      • Klaus Kinski
      • Isabelle Adjani
      • Bruno Ganz
    • 270avis d'utilisateurs
    • 177avis des critiques
    • 79Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 5 victoires et 8 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Nosferatu the Vampyre
    Trailer 2:14
    Nosferatu the Vampyre

    Photos98

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux20

    Modifier
    Klaus Kinski
    Klaus Kinski
    • Count Dracula
    Isabelle Adjani
    Isabelle Adjani
    • Lucy Harker
    Bruno Ganz
    Bruno Ganz
    • Jonathan Harker
    Roland Topor
    Roland Topor
    • Renfield
    Walter Ladengast
    • Dr. Abraham van Helsing
    Dan van Husen
    Dan van Husen
    • Warden
    Jan Groth
    Jan Groth
    • Harbormaster
    Carsten Bodinus
    • Schrader
    Martje Grohmann
    • Mina
    Rijk de Gooyer
    Rijk de Gooyer
    • Town official
    • (as Ryk de Gooyer)
    Clemens Scheitz
    Clemens Scheitz
    • Clerk
    Lo van Hensbergen
    • Harbormaster's Assistent
    John Leddy
    • Coachman
    Margiet van Hartingsveld
    • Vrouw
    Tim Beekman
    • Coffinbearer
    Jacques Dufilho
    Jacques Dufilho
    • Captain
    Michael Edols
    • Lord of the Manor
    • (non crédité)
    Werner Herzog
    Werner Herzog
    • Hand and Feet in Box with Rats
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Werner Herzog
    • Scénario
      • Werner Herzog
      • Tom Shachtman
      • Martje Grohmann
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs270

    7,447.6K
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    Avis à la une

    8HenryHextonEsq

    A pretty fine go at "Dracula"

    This Herzog adaptation of the Dracula story, filtered through the memory in particular of Murnau's "Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horrors", is largely a successful film. It is great in parts and in aspects, but doesn't quite amount to a whole that approaches superlative status. Klaus Kinski is rather good, but not quite spellbinding, in the much-donned cape of the old Count. He is not quite up to the vastly contrasting interpretations I have seen - Schreck and Lugosi. Isabelle Adjani? Hers is far from a terrible performance, as one commentator has said; she is, indeed, reasonable in a role often lacking embellishment in other adaptations. Of course, her striking good looks are certainly far from unwelcome. The chap playing Renfield (the madman, so amusingly and vividly portrayed by Dwight Frye in the 1931 Universal "Dracula") is effective in portraying an outright giggling madman - his laugh is one of *the* most absurd and insane sounds I have heard in film...! The use of music is wonderful, as is Herzog's visual direction - the plague scenes leave quite an impression on the mind, and most scenes are accorded impressive backdrops and appropriate visual textures. Popol Vuh's musical textures are dreamily beguiling, setting just the right tone for Herzog's imagery. The film's downside has to be in the dramatics really; the dialogue and subsequent delivery of, are far from great, perhaps owing to the fact that most of the performers' native tongues are not English, and here they have to speak just that language. There is never quite enough dramatic tension induced by the script or the acting; at times the Renfield chap and Kinski are compelling, but only fitfully.

    Having said all this, it is a fine rendition on film of a rather old and, frankly, enduring story. Herzog must take the credit for its effective atmosphere, but perhaps also the blame for the lacking dramatics. Certainly an enjoyable, generally impressive film.

    Rating:- ****/*****
    chaos-rampant

    How do you remake one of the most historic films your country ever produced?

    With Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht, Werner Herzog replies firmly "by making it your own". Undertaking not only his first genre film in a career rich enough already by 1979 to earn Herzog a place among the most prolific German directors, but also a film with so much baggage, historical, stylistic or otherwise. Not only a retelling essentially of Bram Stocker's Dracula story but also a reimagining an expressionist universe defined by Herzog's cinematic forefathers (FW Murnau a key figure among them). In that aspect, Noferatu is one of the loftier, most ambitious and trickiest films Herzog tackled in a career already filled with them.

    Anyone who comes to this with a previous experience of Herzog's style will realize that the German infant terrible has made the material unmistakeably his. Like most of his films, Noferatu is like a film about a dream about a documentary depicting weird people doing weird things - yet, beneath the minimalism of the plot and the docu-style naturalism of his photography, the movie resonates with the kind of hypnotic power Coppola missed in the alchemical migraine of his '92 version. Filming a medieval German town swept by plague like a grotesque carnival complete with people dancing with goats on tables and having a feast in the middle of a swarm of mice, Herzog goes on to choreograph a heavily made-up Klaus Kinski (looking like a rodent and playing a theatric version of his real half-mad self) through the steps Max Schreck's character took on the deck of the ship in the original movie as though he wants to prove that he can make it look every bit as creepy as Murnau did.

    Perhaps reflecting the original in this department, Herzog's Nosferatu is still a pretty uneven film. Parts of it work better than others. When Kinski makes a grand appearance seething malice and despair, the screen is on fire. Grand antics work really well for this kind of character and this kind of movie. Bruno Ganz and Isabelle Adjani have enough charisma to carry the rest of the movie but the story structure occasionally betrays them. When Herzog cuts to Renfield's parts, you can feel the movie loosing steam with every gleeful cackle. When he cuts back to some kind of devilment going on, or even better the surreal stylizations of a bat flying in slow-motion set to Popol Vuh's repetitive drones, the movie comes closer to hitting the right emotional notes. When it achieves that kind of hypnotic, nightmarish vibe, the movie is great; when it doesn't, it's not bad.

    And lastly, even though I understand Herzog's dislike for formalism, is there any particular reason why 90% of the movie is shot from eye-level? Makes one wish for the extreme skewed angles of Japanese New Wave directors.
    twltzone

    Stunning!!

    I just purchased this on DVD and its easily one of my favorite new disks. Included in the DVD masterpiece are: the English Version, the German Version with English subtitles, audio commentary by director Werner Herzog, 2 different US theatrical trailers, 1 Spanish theatrical trailer and even a making of the movie mini-feature!!! Very worth the money!!!

    This is not an average movie by any means!!! It also appears to be a salute to the great German Expressionist films of the early 1900's. The story line is very intelligent and compassionate. The dialogue is spoken very soft and slowly. There is not very much action in the film, but the performances and cinematography are nothing short of breathtaking!!

    Klaus Kinski plays a very convincing Dracula in this 1979 classic. His slow movements are almost hypnotizing!!! Just watch how he moves his hands!! They move so slow and very mysterious!! The guy who played the "nut case" was great!! The images of coffins, crucifixes, rats, and how rumors of the plague were spreading were brilliantly executed.

    If you liked this film, you might want to check out 1992's "The Cronos" for another example of a compassionate and intelligent story about Vampires, but set in Mexico. Both films explore the "humanistic" internal conflict in vampires.
    kilgore-7

    Hypnotic and exquisitely photographed

    Werner Herzog's version of Murnau's classic NOSFERATU is a captivating experience. Klaus Kinski is perfect as Count Dracula. He brilliantly conveys the loneliness and sadness of a creature who longs to be human. Count Dracula is the victim in this film, he does not enjoy his immortality and wants only to live, love and die like a human. Isabelle Adjani's ethereal beauty punctuates her ghostlike performance as Lucy, and Bruno Ganz turns in another solid performance as Jonathan.

    Like other Herzog films, NOSFERATU THE VAMPYRE is exquisitely photographed, eliciting an almost transcendental experience. Jonathan's journey to Dracula's castle, the dancing of the plague-ridden townsfolk, and the final scene are prime examples.

    Once again, using the compositions of Popol Vuh and Wagner, Herzog creates an effective amalgamation of images an music.

    One drawback to the film is that it is so beautiful to look at, it is not especially frightening. This may discourage some Dracula fans, but to those who want a hypnotic, smart vampire film, this is the one to see.
    10mstomaso

    Atmospheric, creepy and gorgeous

    Another classic collaboration of Werner Herzog and Klaus Kinski, Nosferatu is not just a remake of the F. W. Murnau silent classic, but an extension of it. Herzog not only develops the Stoker story more directly than the original did, but even reintroduces the original characters - Orlok becomes Dracula, and the Hutters become the Harkers.

    Like many of the films involving Herzog and Kinski, Nosferatu is a period piece and creates the context of its plot through beautiful cinematography and a relentless but unhasty pace, not through the script. ThoughKinski dominates the screen just as he always does in these collaborations, the performances of fellow greats Isabelle Adjani and Bruno Ganz are also worthy of mention. Ganz's Jonathan Harker is certainly the most sympathetic character in the film, and Adjani's Lucy is beautiful, spooky, and just odd enough to fit the role perfectly.

    Nosferatu is a retelling of the Dracula tale. Unlike its generally inferior competitors, Nosferatu - both the 1922 and 1979 versions - sticks very close to Bram Stoker's text - neither elaborating the focus on bloodsucking (obsessed upon by most American interpretations of Dracula), nor revising Jonathan Harker and Dr. Van Helsing as heroic characters, nor adding erotic or romantic elements to the depravity of the original concept. If you know what Stoker was about, you will thrill to the often forgotten aspects of Stoker's novel which are redeemed here - the plague rats, the gypsies, etc.

    Kinki's intensity allows him to become a perfect Dracula. He understands his role perfectly and never once slips out of 'the hunter'. This is another very important aspect of the Stoker legend which has been sadly contorted by the popularization of the Dracula legend. Nosferatu's Count Dracula is not a charming eastern European gentleman with a quirky bloodsucking habit and a lovesick soul, he is a wily, terrifying, soulless, inhuman, obsessive, predator. And he has absolutely no concern for the affairs of Homo sapiens sapiens.

    The film is mostly shot in Amsterdam's old city, which fits the mood of the film well. Other locations are in Germany, and Dracula's castle, for once, is an actual castle - even the interior shots! The wonderfully eerie and disorienting Popul Vuh soundtrack compliments the typically Herzogian picture-perfect visuals.

    This is a great film for those seeking an accessible introduction to film-as-art, and the legendary collaborations of Herzog and Kinski. It will likely annoy those who think of Dracula as a good looking romantic guy with a nasty habit, but is highly recommended for fans of Stoker's original work.

    .

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Werner Herzog decided to restore the original names of the characters the day the copyright of the original "Dracula" expired, while still following the movie blueprint laid out by F.W. Murnau's Nosferatu le vampire (1922).
    • Gaffes
      (at around 58 mins) When the captain of the ship is writing in his log he says they left the Caspian Sea, which is landlocked and nearly 1000 miles away from the port in Bulgaria where the voyage started. Bulgaria is on the Black Sea.
    • Citations

      Count Dracula: [subtitled version] Time is an abyss... profound as a thousand nights... Centuries come and go... To be unable to grow old is terrible... Death is not the worst... Can you imagine enduring centuries, experiencing each day the same futilities...

    • Versions alternatives
      The English-language version was only available in a shorter cut until 2000, which was about 10 minutes shorter.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Spisok korabley (2008)
    • Bandes originales
      Rheingold
      Written by Richard Wagner

      Performed by Wiener Philharmoniker

      Conducted by Georg Solti (as Sir Georg Solti)

      Decca LC 0171

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Nosferatu the Vampyre?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Does anyone know how they handled all those rats (contained them, kept them from biting, etc.)?
    • What are the differences between the International Version and the German Version?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 17 janvier 1979 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Allemagne de l'Ouest
      • France
    • Langues
      • Allemand
      • Anglais
      • Roms
      • Polonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Nosferatu, vampiro de la noche
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Delft, Zuid-Holland, Pays-Bas(many exteriors)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Werner Herzog Filmproduktion
      • Gaumont
      • Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF)
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 3 451 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 47min(107 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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