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Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2014 6:17 pm
by unclehulot
Just to spell it out, the MoC Blu-ray does not suffer from this malady?
Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2014 6:38 pm
by EddieLarkin
The MoC disc is fine. That is how the problem was discovered;
there are frames on the MoC disc that are missing on the Kino.
Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2014 12:06 am
by Orlac
zedz wrote:Well, the Kalat commentary is exactly as good as you'd expect, but the Ferrara interview is completely worthless. He talks about the film only in the vaguest of terms and spends much of the time apparently reading from the wikipedia page on 'Vampires' that he printed out. I can see why it was left off the previous release!
The Jackson piece is decent, but he's pretty much gazumped by Kalat, who leaves few stones unturned.
Ferrara came off like an friendly expert compared to R Dixon Smith.
Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Sat Jul 19, 2014 11:30 pm
by lzx
It's probably too late to bring this up, but after the 'incident' with Kino regarding Metropolis back in 2010, why is Nosferatu again region locked?
Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Sat Jul 26, 2014 10:10 am
by pianist
Took advantage of Eureka's sale on a few titles, picked up the steel-book. Waited for months to buy Dr Mabuse der Spieler but gave in eventually. Miffed that I paid more for the regular Blu-ray last month than the steelbook is going for now, but that's life!
Can't wait to see Nosferatu tonight I have to say.
Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Sat Aug 09, 2014 8:47 am
by martin
Here's a video of the pianist Gabriela Montero improvising a score for the entire
Nosferatu at a showing in Berlin, January 18, 2014. Quite remarkable.
German brochure.
Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Fri Mar 27, 2015 7:09 pm
by HerrSchreck
It's coming soon, I really truly swear it this time... cough...
Shooting for this weekend, hope I pull it off.
Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Sun Aug 12, 2018 11:18 am
by Orlac
To show how far we have come, this is the version of Nosferatu that Eureka licensed from JEF Films and released on VHS in the 90s -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZqUKJwm6Co
I picked this up through a coupon in The Guardian newspaper at the age of 10, and was baffled by the fact that, contrary to the video box, the characters are all called by their Stoker names - i.e Orlok is Dracula, Hutter is Harker etc.
I'd love to know who did the organ score - unlike most PD silent tapes, it actually syncs up well. At one point, an orchestra cuts in. The other PD VHS standard version of Nosferatu was taken from an actual theatrical reissue and the score there is credited to Peter Schirmann.
Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2018 4:20 pm
by Brent Reid
Eureka's 1999 VHS was actually a bootleg of image's 1991 LaserDisc.
Nosferatu has
many fine scores, but I'm afraid the one linked to isn't one of them. It's just a needle-drop of some random but appropriately doomy-sounding music. The point at which the "orchestra cuts in" is just the end of one record and the start of another. If you want to know its source, try Shazam.
Altenatively, just search for "Nosferatu organ" on YouTube and many full length scores come up. Tim Howard's is the only organ score accompanying the film on disc, on Image's two DVDs.
Re: 64 / BD 70 Nosferatu
Posted: Fri Oct 04, 2024 6:03 pm
by Orlac
Brent Reid wrote: Sat Nov 24, 2018 4:20 pm
Eureka's 1999 VHS was actually a bootleg of image's 1991 LaserDisc.
Nosferatu has
many fine scores, but I'm afraid the one linked to isn't one of them. It's just a needle-drop of some random but appropriately doomy-sounding music. The point at which the "orchestra cuts in" is just the end of one record and the start of another. If you want to know its source, try Shazam.
Altenatively, just search for "Nosferatu organ" on YouTube and many full length scores come up. Tim Howard's is the only organ score accompanying the film on disc, on Image's two DVDs.
6 years later, but thanks for the Shazam tip. I've now identified the music from the Eureka VHS as being
Reger: Introduction, Passacaglia & Fugue in E Minor by Graham Barber.