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Nosferatu in Venice

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Nosferatu in Venice (1988)

September. 10,1988
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5.2
| Horror
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Professor Paris Catalano visits Venice, to investigate the last known appearance of the famous vampire Nosferatu during the carnival of 1786.

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Reviews

MamaGravity
1988/09/10

good back-story, and good acting

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Organnall
1988/09/11

Too much about the plot just didn't add up, the writing was bad, some of the scenes were cringey and awkward,

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mraculeated
1988/09/12

The biggest problem with this movie is it’s a little better than you think it might be, which somehow makes it worse. As in, it takes itself a bit too seriously, which makes most of the movie feel kind of dull.

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Mischa Redfern
1988/09/13

I didn’t really have many expectations going into the movie (good or bad), but I actually really enjoyed it. I really liked the characters and the banter between them.

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Cineanalyst
1988/09/14

A semi-sequel or reworking of Werner Herzog's 1979 "Nosferatu," which itself was a remake of F.W. Murnau's 1922 silent-film "Nosferatu," "Nosferatu in Venice" is a far cry from the brilliance of Murnau's original, let alone Bram Stoker's novel "Dracula," for which Murnau's film was an unauthorized adaptation. I'm not a fan of Herzog's remake; it's a slow and dreary affair that eliminates much of the intelligence of Murnau's work without substituting anything especially thoughtful itself. But, this, "Nosferatu in Venice," is worse. The most compelling parts left in Herzog's remake--mostly the plague stuff and the correspondingly appropriate drab cinematography--after its corruption of the themes of naturalism from Murnau's film, which reworked the subtext of venereal disease from Stoker's book, are even further debased here.What there is is a derivative dreary look based on the Herzog film, including an abundance of dissolves and multiple-exposure shots; the stupid romance stuff Herzog added, ad nauseam; a complete rejection of Nosferatu as representing anything natural, besides brief mentions of plague, and, instead, adopting some generic horror film type exploitation of Catholic iconography and the occult, sex and nudity and cheap special effects; and only one decent shadow of the vampire shot (the 1922 film is especially famous for its shadows). And, of course, Klaus Kinski returning to the Dracula-esque role; except, this time he refused to wear the sad clown makeup and, reportedly, was such a terror to work with that the film went through several directors, which is surely part of the reason the film is such a mess. At least, Kinski is a bit lighter of foot this outing, although he's still quite stiff in his delivery. The film in general somehow manages to be seemingly as dull and slow as Herzog's despite its average shot length being only approximately 6 seconds (my count) compared to the excruciating approximately 20 seconds (per the cinemetrics website) of the '79 film. Indeed, the editing in this film is choppy, especially during the special effects scenes. And the musical score is constant and annoying.The reason it's so boring is surely due to its lack of much of a plot. It's full of tedious scenic shots of Venice, of shots of birds (and some barking dogs and, presumably to Herzog's disgust, only one insert shot of rats), and of men standing in boats and, mostly Kinski, walking around. The relatively sparse dialogue is repetitive and mostly consists of exposition and stupidity. See, Nosferatu wants to die, but he needs to be loved by a virgin first.On the plus side, he's a comparatively strong vampire. I've been watching a lot of Dracula movies since reading Stoker's novel and so many of them feature such weak vamps it's hard to believe they'd ever have lifespans longer than humans. Also, Christopher Plummer plays the Van Helsing type here, a role he'd also play in "Dracula 2000," and Donald Pleasence, also of "Halloween" series fame, plays a priest here after already having played Dr. Seward in the 1979 Universal "Dracula."(Mirror Note: Like other bad Dracula-esque movies, such as some of the Hammer sequels and the '79 Universal film, this one is inconsistent in whether or not vampires cast reflections. The Nosferatu does cast a reflection in water on the ground in an early scene, but he later doesn't cast a reflection in a mirror at a party. Splitting the difference, once he acquires a virgin's love, his reflection gradually appears as he looks in a mirror--a laughable scene that reminds me of "Nocturna" (1979), where the vampire saw her reflection due to the power of disco dancing.)

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d1senior
1988/09/15

Warning the other characters (and, presumably, the audience) that the seance in which they are about to take part could "provoke reactions of quite terrifying proportions," Christopher Plummer proves himself a less-than-reliable guide through this hideous mess. With pompous, over-cooked music blaring out of every scene, regardless of what is actually taking part on screen, and the kind of existential angst that would make a 14 year old goth blush, 'Vampire In Venice' lurches from one flaccid cliche to another. Gypsies dancing around a fire on the beach at night? Check! Street carnival with masks and silly frocks aplenty? Check! Vampires musing on the pain of spending eternity alone? Please, no more.The 'horror' scenes appear to parody the entire genre. The film's running time - the video case claimed it was just over 90 minutes, an outright lie - stretches out into the black wastes of infinity, making the experience of watching it akin to sitting through one of Warhol's experiments in cinematic endurance. Klaus Kinski, so watchable in almost anything else, never seems sure whether he's the devil incarnate, or an aging rocker out of retirement for one last comeback gig. Even Donald Pleasance drifts by, unable to make a dent in the vast wall of boring, self-satisfied predictability. The horror of eternity was surely never supposed to be THIS bad.

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dimadick
1988/09/16

At long last a movie who focuses in the vampire itself.My fascination about the genre seem to have the desire to live,you could call it survival instict,but also the wish to die.That's about what every human being has,or else our lifes would be much different,but the vampires have to face both desires getting stronger through the centuries.This movie is has more drama and plot than many other movies.The leading star is much better than Christopher Lee and Bella Lugosi.If you want to see a vampire film which is not laughable this is it.

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John Firth
1988/09/17

This brilliant Italian vampire film certainly has an accomplished cast. Whilst Pleasence and Plummer are good, Kinski acts his socks off in reprising his 1979 role of Nosferatu. De Rossi and Knecht are also good, and pull off this whilst being so unbelievably gorgeous as well. What lets this down is the dodgy dubbing in the English language release that I saw - even though Pleasence and Plummer seem to have their own voices, the others look dodgily done, even if they are their own (which some must be). Suffice to say, watch the Italian version, and be amazed.

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