DVD - Wide Screen Learn more
Enter a zip code
FOR PARENTS
Closed Caption; Director interview; Photo montage; Make-up montage; Willem Dafoe interview; Director commentary; 16x9 widescreen; English & Spanish subtitles; Dolby Digital 5.1
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Shadow [6:01]
2. Artifice [4:32]
3. Method Actor [2:15]
4. Moving Picture [3:44]
5. To Be [3:03]
6. Invoke [3:34]
7. Unexplored [3:32]
8. Incredible [4:02]
9. Taking Direction [2:53]
10. Bad Neighbor [3:09]
11. Alone [3:08]
12. Demons [3:13]
13. An Arrangement [5:10]
14. Mystical Substance [5:41]
15. Dabbled [3:30]
16. Vanishing Crew [3:13]
17. Creeping Around [2:48]
18. Nightmare [2:45]
19. Natural Light [4:23]
20. Ultimate Sacrifice [4:33]
21. Begin [2:41]
22. Enough [4:31]
23. Death Scene [3:43]
24. End Credits [5:36]
An ingenious and surprisingly effective narrative gimmick is employed in this hard-to-classify film, which purports to tell the "real" story behind the making of Nosferatu, the 1922 German horror film that brought director F. W. Murnau international acclaim. According to Steven Katz's devilishly clever script, Murnau (played by John Malkovich with his customary intensity) brings verisimilitude to his unauthorized screen version of the Dracula legend by casting an authentic vampire, Max Schreck (a nearly unrecognizable Willem Dafoe), in the title role. Only trouble is, Schreck can't restrain his unholy urges -- and his periodic feedings on cast and crew members outstrip Murnau's ability to replace them. Director E. Elias Merhige (Begotten) replicates certain images from Nosferatu with uncanny accuracy, but fidelity to cinematic history isn't his primary aim; he's interested in exploiting a lunatic notion that provokes chuckles as well as chills. Although Shadow swings from suspenseful horror to black comedy, Merhige maintains an eerie, unhealthy atmosphere throughout. Malkovich portrays Murnau as a perpetually annoyed, arrogant, frustrated artist, and Dafoe -- who earned an Oscar nomination for his performance -- makes Schreck alternately terrifying and ridiculous. Shadow of the Vampire deserves one look solely on the basis of its audacious concept, but it's a deliciously macabre movie that begs for repeated viewings. Merhige provides a commentary for the DVD, which also includes an interview with producer Nicolas Cage, a featurette covering the film's inspiration and production, and a gallery of stills. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations
Characters abuse alcohol and drugs, scene of morphine-induced hysteria
Brief strong language
Brief nudity, scenes of decadence
Comic but scary vampire scenes, characters killed
Not an issue.
Not an issue.
About Shadow of the Vampire
Parents need to know that despite this movie's comic and satiric tone, there are some creepy vampire moments. Schreck drinks a bat's blood. There are some decadent performers in a nightclub, and some characters use drugs and behave in a manner that may be very upsetting. There's brief nudity and some strong language.
Families can talk about what it means to say that someone is "chasing an altogether different ghost." Does everyone chase a ghost of some kind? Which ghosts were Murnau and Schreck chasing? Families will want to talk about the way that Murnau and Schreck were willing to sacrifice anyone around them to get what they wanted. The leading lady tells Murnau that live audiences give her life while a camera takes it out of her. How does that differ from Murnau's view?