In an exclusive behind-the-scenes clip from 'Nosferatu,' Bill Skarsgård and director Robert Eggers detail how the character of Count Orlok came to life.
With students returning to campus, one question is looming in the backs of everyone’s minds: How did you spend your Christmas day? Many will say, “spending time with family” or “nothing really; It was a normal day.
Lily-Rose Depp, who plays Orlok's object of obsession, Ellen Hutter, calls Skarsgård "the only man for the job." Nicholas Hoult, who plays Ellen's husband, Thomas, says, "It's something that is so intimidating and fully realized and horrific that it is incredible to see but also terrifying to be around."
Robert Eggers’s recent film “Nosferatu” — starring Bill Skarsgård and Lily-Rose Depp — is a lackluster addition to the Dracula mythos.
Nosferatu”—the hit horror thriller starring Bill Skarsgård and Lily-Rose Depp—is new on digital streaming. Find out how you can watch it at home.
Lily-Rose Depp and Nicholas Hoult share their experience starring in Nosferatu. From performing alongside Bill Skarsgård and Willem Dafoe, to Lily-Rose's breathtaking portrayal, being possessed by a terrifying vampire,
Much has been said about Count Orlok's new look in Nosferatu and a featurette for the movie offers an up close and personal look at Bill Skarsgård's transformation into the terrifying movie
Overall, “Nosferatu” is another great Eggers flick and one of the best Gothic horror pieces of recent memory. More than being a great genre piece, this film projects powerful thematic messages.
Bill Skarsgård has met his match in the trailer for Locked. The actor, who tends to embody movie monsters, is up against a sadistic Anthony Hopkins in the thriller, which hits theaters on March 21. In the clip,
Bill Skarsgard has “never been more scared in playing a character” than Count Orlok in ‘Nosferatu’. While the 34-year-old actor has portrayed the terrifying Pennywise the Clown in the two ...
I didn't always have a taste for the usual rom-coms and action-packed films I'm known to watch. I wanted to see romantasy and gothic features that held hidden messages in their plots. Specifically, I yearned for a vampire tale that made me question life after devouring Immortal Dark by Tigest Girma — and I found it in Robert Eggers' Nosferatu.
But things really took a turn when "Original Nosferatu" set their sights on Weekend Update host Colin Jost. In true Sarah Sherman fashion, the rest of the segment devolved into a roast session. Jost endured cutting insults about his anatomy, alleged assistant-creeping tendencies, and a supposed coke habit.