The primary full trailer for Robert Eggers‘ extremely anticipated Nosferatu remake has been launched and presents a haunting new take a look at the movie.
The upcoming movie is a remake of the 1922 F. W. Murnau basic, with a heavier emphasis on gothic horror helmed by Eggers. It stars Lily-Rose Depp as Ellen Hutter, whereas Invoice Skarsgård will play the titular vampire Depend Orlok, with a bloodthirsty infatuation
The brand new trailer sees Hutter recounting her goals, the place everybody round her is slaughtered however that she’d “by no means been happier” within the face of demise. The tensions rises all through the remainder of the trailer, earlier than Hutter and Orlok lastly come face-to-face, although we by no means actually see the vampire, simply his shadow.
The closing shot of the trailer additionally recreates an iconic shot from the 1922 authentic. Watch the trailer under.
Nosferatu additionally stars Willem Dafoe, Nicholas Hoult, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Emma Corrin, Ralph Ineson and Simon McBurney.
The movie is because of hit cinemas on Christmas Day (December 25) in america and on January 3 within the UK.
Nosferatu will mark Eggers’ fourth function movie, after making his debut in 2015 with the acclaimed The Witch, after which following it with 2019’s celebrated The Lighthouse.
Eggers’ final movie was the 2022 epic The Northman. It scored a glowing five-star evaluation from NME, with Alex Flood writing: “If there’s one criticism to be made, it’s that the extra avant-garde moments generally flip tedious. Dafoe is finest when he’s freaking out, however an early rite-of-passage sequence that ends in an orgy of burping and farting appears foolish – even when it does soften up the viewer for a surprising plot twist. Later, a mounted Valkyrie with braces flying by the sky tries so as to add layered that means, but causes confusion as an alternative. Tone down the oddness, nonetheless, and also you’d simply have one other gory historic snoozefest. Eggers’ type is completely distinctive and he’s clearly having fun with himself, even when his actors may not be.”