Nosferatu Direct

This resolution is profoundly ambiguous. Is Nina a feminist martyr, reclaiming agency through self-sacrifice? Or is she a victim of a patriarchal system that requires female purity to atone for male failure? The film leans toward the latter. Her sacrifice is not a battle; it is a biological inevitability. As the final shot shows Orlok dissolving into a pillar of smoke, the film cuts not to Nina’s heroic corpse but to a coda showing Hutter mourning her. The “happy” ending is hollow. The plague has ended, but the institution of marriage is a graveyard.

F. W. Murnau’s Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror is more than a foundational text of the horror genre; it is a complex cultural artifact that encodes the anxieties of post-World War I Germany and the broader tremors of early 20th-century modernity. This paper argues that Count Orlok is not merely a monster but a manifestation of several intertwined societal fears: contagion and pandemic disease (syphilis and the Spanish Flu), the trauma of industrial warfare, the destabilization of bourgeois domesticity, and the terror of the foreign “Other.” Through a close analysis of Murnau’s expressionist mise-en-scène, the film’s violation of Gothic spatial norms, and its unique treatment of the vampire mythos, this paper positions Nosferatu as a prescient allegory for the collapse of traditional boundaries—between self and other, life and death, rural and urban, human and machine. Nosferatu

To understand Nosferatu ’s enduring power, one must attend to its formal innovations. Murnau was a pioneer of the “unchained camera” ( entfesselte Kamera ), using fluid tracking shots and unusual angles that prefigured Citizen Kane. The famous shot of Orlok walking down the ship’s corridor, his rigid, predatory stride contrasting with the swaying of the vessel, creates a dissonance between the human and the mechanical. Orlok moves not like an animal but like a machine—a automaton of death. This resolution is profoundly ambiguous

The Undead Modernity: Shadow, Disease, and the Vampire as Social Cataclysm in F. W. Murnau’s Nosferatu (1922) The film leans toward the latter