The New Yorker Radio Hour   /     Willem Dafoe on “Nosferatu”

Summary

The actor talks with Adam Howard about playing a vampire hunter in Robert Eggers’s remake of “Nosferatu.” After hundreds of vampire movies, Eggers “wanted him to be scary again.”

Subtitle
The actor talks with Adam Howard about playing a vampire hunter in Robert Eggers’s remake of “Nosferatu.” After hundreds of vampire movies, Eggers “wanted him to be scary again.”
Duration
00:20:58
Publishing date
2024-12-20 19:00
Link
https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/tnyradiohour
Contributors
  WNYC Studios and The New Yorker
author  
Enclosures
https://mgln.ai/e/14/tracking.swap.fm/track/uJwtcKQUPuqBQPfusm59/pdrl.fm/7a3b46/pdst.fm/e/dts.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/waaa.wnyc.org/82098f2c-a672-49b6-8a05-b8245aec3dbc/episodes/dc5291db-c98c-4aa4-9d80-ba44eaa94f01/audio/128/default.mp3?aid=rss_fee
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

Willem Dafoe has one of the most distinctive faces and most distinctive voices in movies, deployed to great effect in blockbuster genre movies as well as smaller indie darlings; he’s played everyone from Jesus Christ to the Green Goblin. His most recent project is the highly anticipated “Nosferatu,” which opens Christmas Day. Robert Eggers’s film is a remake, more than a century later, of one of the oldest existing vampire movies, and Dafoe plays a vampire-hunting professor.  After “Twilight” and hundreds of other vampire stories, “Nosferatu” aims “to make him scary again,” Dafoe told The New Yorker Radio Hour’s Adam Howard. It’s his third collaboration with the director, after “The Witch” and “The Lighthouse.” “When you do a Robert Eggers movie,” he says, “there’s a wealth of detail and it’s rooted in history. … So you enter it and the world works on you. And I love that.”