Nosferatu (2024) Review - Is It Really Horrifying Or Just Boring?

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Nosferatu review.webp

(Image source: Movie Poster Edited in Canva By Me)

Have you ever watched a film that felt beautiful and scary at the same time? The Nosferatu movie by Robert Eggers, was that kind of experience for me. It is not just a horror film, it feels like an art piece. When it ended, I kept thinking I had watched an old nightmare brought to life like a painting. In this review, I’m sharing my honest thoughts and tell you guys what worked for me, what felt weak, and who should watch it. Let’s begin.

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(Image source: Movie screen capture)


Synopsis

In 19th century Germany, a young woman named Ellen is haunted by terrible dreams. Her husband Thomas travels to close a deal with a reclusive noble named Count Orlok, who is in fact an ancient vampire. Orlok’s obsession with Ellen brings plague and death to their town, and Ellen must decide how far she will go to end the horror. (Source: IMDB)

Trailer

First impressions

The story opens on Ellen. Since childhood she has suffered the same dark nightmare bodies, whispers, and a voice she cannot escape. She wakes shaken and tells Thomas, but he brushes it off as a dream and hurries to work. Thomas is poor and newly married, so when a client offers money for a risky property deal in a distant, ruined castle, he says yes. Ellen begs him not to go, but he convinces her and leaves her in the care of a trusted friend.

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(Image source: Movie screen capture)


After Thomas being far from home, Thomas finally meets the man behind the deal and realizes too late that this is no ordinary client. It is Count Orlok, a very old and very dangerous vampire. By the time Thomas understands what he has walked into, escape is almost impossible. Meanwhile, back in town, Ellen starts sleepwalking. Her friend worries for her as the nightmares grow worse and there is still no news from Thomas. A doctor is called, and he senses a dark force pressing in on her life.

When Thomas returns, Ellen’s nightmares stop for a moment, but the peace does not last. Orlok is now on the move. Strange things begin to happen, Thomas was having peculiar illness, rats in the streets, whispers about a curse. Orlok’s presence feels tied to Ellen, and the threat becomes personal. At last, Ellen learns of an old belief; "a vampire can be destroyed if a woman keeps him with her until sunrise. It is a terrible choice, but it may be the only way to save the people she loves."

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(Image source: Movie screen capture)


What worked for me ✅

  • The visuals look like paintings: candlelight on stone walls, long shadows, misty streets. I felt like I was walking through a haunted museum.
  • Count Orlok’s presence changes the air: the eyes, the posture, the slow movements. He is scary, but I also sense sadness, like he is trapped by his own curse.
  • Ellen is the emotional backbone. Her innocence and growing courage kept me emotionally invested.
  • The sound design is sharp. Small sounds like a door closing, a floorboard raised my heartbeat. The music is haunting, and the silences hit even harder.
  • The fear builds slowly. There are almost no jump scares; the dread grows step by step until it feels like a lived nightmare.

What didn’t work for me ❌

  • The pacing is slow on purpose, and it will test your patience if you want fast, loud horror.
  • The style is artsy. If you prefer straight, simple horror, some parts will feel boring or too symbolic.
  • A few scenes get so dark and metaphorical that I felt confused about what was happening and why.
  • At times it looks gorgeous but feels a bit distant, so a few emotional beats do not land as strongly as they could.

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(Image source: Movie screen capture)


Conclusion

Nosferatu does not scare you with loud tricks. It plants fear inside your head and lets it grow. For people who enjoy horror as an art form, who like strong atmosphere, careful images, and slow dread. If you keep those things in mind, this is a great pick. Watch it if you want a deep, haunting experience. Skip it if you want quick thrills and constant twists.

My rating: 4 out of 5.
For me, it’s a beautiful nightmare, the kind that lingers after the credits. Count Orlok’s shadow feels like it steps out of the screen and stays with you. It reminded me that fear is not only something you see; sometimes it is something you carry for a while after.

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