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Conjuring Nosferatu: Robert Eggers Curates Gothic Inspiration at Film at Lincoln Center

The Eve of Ivan Kupalo, Beauty and the Beast, Nosferatu, The She-Butterfly, and Svengali.

Film at Lincoln Center (FLC) invites audiences into the shadowy, atmospheric world of gothic horror with Conjuring Nosferatu: Robert Eggers Presents, a curated series showcasing films that inspired Robert Eggers’s critically acclaimed Nosferatu. Running February 5–9, the event includes a special 35mm screening of Eggers’s Nosferatu alongside a lineup of cinematic masterpieces that shaped his hauntingly beautiful adaptation of the Dracula mythos.




“I am honored to share this collection of films that inspired my adaptation of Nosferatu,” said Eggers. “It’s a world of Gothic Romance, fairy tales, and folklore, made by filmmakers with a passion to transport the audience to another time, another place, and another way of thinking and believing.”




Eggers’s Nosferatu, set in the gothic heart of 19th-century Europe, stars Nicholas Hoult as Thomas Hutter, Lily-Rose Depp as Ellen, and Bill Skarsgård as the chilling Count Orlok. This cinematic journey is rendered with Eggers’s signature meticulous detail and emotional depth, transforming the timeless horror tale into an evocative exploration of desire, disease, and death.



The Lineup: A Gothic Journey [FILMS & DESCRIPTIONS]

All films screen in the Walter Reade Theater (165 W. 65th St.) or Francesca Beale Theater (144 W. 65th St.)


Nosferatu
Robert Eggers, 2024, U.S., 35mm, 132m

Nosferatu A Focus Features release.

For his fourth feature film, Robert Eggers exhumes what might be considered the urtext for all horror cinema: F.W. Murnau’s landmark masterpiece, 1922’s Nosferatu (itself an adaptation, or perhaps more accurately a transformation, of Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel, Dracula). Thomas Hutter (Nicholas Hoult) seeks to provide financial stability for his wife Ellen (Lily-Rose Depp) by selling a decrepit local villa to a Transylvanian nobleman, the reclusive Count Orlok (Bill Skarsgård). Hutter’s journey is marked by myriad strange and frightening events, but little does he know that his otherworldly encounter with Orlok will summon a seemingly unstoppable, plague-like evil to his own doorstep. Rendered with all of the rich detail and disarming atmospherics that have characterized his work to date, Nosferatu is Eggers at the height of his powers: an astonishing, meticulously crafted, and oddly touching parable about desire, disease, and death. Also featuring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Emma Corrin, Willem Dafoe, and others.


Wednesday, February 5 at 6:00pm at the Walter Reade Theater 




Svengali
Archie Mayo, 1931, U.S., 16mm, 81m

Svengali 16mm collection print courtesy of the UCLA Film & Television Archive.

A Pre-Code sound take on George du Maurier’s 1894 novel Trilby, this eerie mystery stars John Barrymore as the titular music teacher, who controls (and ultimately destroys) the young women under his tutelage through his curious powers of suggestion. Svengali sets his sights on Trilby O’Farrell (Marian Marsh), an artist’s model, and the sinister teacher’s pattern of manipulation and ruin seems to be repeating itself yet again—but Trilby’s old lover, Billee (Bramwell Fletcher), seeks to discover the truth about Svengali’s hypnotic influence. Barrymore’s turn in the lead role is itself a feat of silver-screen mesmerism, portraying Svengali as a cruel yet magnetic figure who wields his own charisma as an instrument of terrible power.


Thursday, February 6 at 6:15pm at the Francesca Beale Theater





Beauty and the Beast
Jean Cocteau, 1946, France, 35mm, 96m
French with English subtitles

Beauty and the Beast

Among world cinema’s greatest fairy tales, Jean Cocteau’s 1946 adaptation of Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont’s 1757 story endures as one of the medium’s most beloved and influential fantasies. Jean Marais (as the feral Beast) and Josette Day (as the young Beauty who transforms his heart) turn in historically romantic and utterly magnetic performances that, combined with a delirious array of exquisite sets and costumes and Cocteau’s penchant for harnessing the artifice of filmmaking to conjure a world beyond and yet within our own, cohere into a timeless reflection on wonder, romantic desire, and death.


Friday, February 7 at 6:00pm at the Walter Reade Theater
Saturday, February 8 at 1:30pm at the Walter Reade Theater




Great Expectations
David Lean, 1946, U.K., 118m

Great Expectations

Perhaps the definitive film adaptation of Charles Dickens, David Lean’s classic 1946 rendition endures as one of the all-time great (and most faithful) transfigurations of literature into cinema. The timeless story of orphan Pip (Anthony Wager and John Mills) as he grows up in 1810s London with the help of an unknown benefactor, Great Expectations—the first of Lean’s signature takes on Dickens, the other being 1948’s Oliver Twist—is powered by an astonishing ensemble cast, assembled by production company Cineguild, including Valerie Hobson, Jean Simmons, Alec Guinness, William Currie, Martita Hunt, and others. But most pertinent here: the film’s graceful, dimensional depiction of 19th-century England, expertly photographed by DP Guy Green.


Saturday, February 8 at 3:45pm at the Walter Reade Theater




The Queen of Spades
Thorold Dickinson, 1949, U.K., 95m

The Queen of Spades

Drawing from Alexander Pushkin’s short story of the same title, Thorold Dickinson’s stunning, baroque fantasy conjures a sense of the supernatural that verges on the surreal. Set in 1806, the film follows a Russian military officer (Anton Walbrook) who seeks to learn the secret of a countess (Edith Evans) who purportedly sold her soul in exchange for learning the secret to winning high-stakes card games. He (along with a friend and fellow officer) begins courting the countess’s young ward in the hopes of getting closer to the countess, but soon enough his scheme goes badly sideways—and, perhaps, supernatural. An object lesson in the power of cinema to evoke atmosphere and the sense of an invisible world beyond the veil of the visible.


Friday, February 7 at 8:15pm at the Walter Reade Theater
Sunday, February 9 at 5:15pm at the Walter Reade Theater






Andriesh
Yakov Bazelyan, Sergei Parajanov, 1954, USSR, 63m
Russian with English subtitles

Andriesh Courtesy of the Oleksandr Dovzhenko National Centre.

Sergei Parajanov’s feature debut was this mesmerizing fairy tale adaptation, drawn from the work of Moldavian writer/poet Emilian Bukov. The story concerns a young shepherd boy who dreams of becoming a knight and receives an enchanted flute, which assists him in his journey to the castle of an evil wizard known as Black Whirlwind. Shot by The Color of Pomegranates DP Suren Shahbazyan and expanding upon one of his earlier student films, Andriesh affords us a fascinating glimpse at Parajanov’s artistry at the very beginning of his career, his mastery of cinematic pictorialism already in evidence.

Friday, February 7 at 4:30pm at the Walter Reade Theater
Sunday, February 9 at 2:00pm at the Walter Reade Theater





The Innocents
Jack Clayton, 1961, U.K., 100m

The Innocents

A seminal gothic chiller, Jack Clayton’s second feature (following his Oscar-nominated debut, Room at the Top) draws its plot from Henry James’s 1898 novella A Turn of the Screw, adapted for the occasion by William Archibald and Truman Capote. Deborah Kerr stars as Miss Giddens, a woman working her first job as a governess for a rich bachelor (Michael Redgrave), moving to his country estate to look after two orphans who are in his custody. But as time passes, Miss Giddens increasingly believes that the estate is haunted, and that the children’s outbursts are evidence of spectral possession…. A touchstone work examining the relationship between the paranormal and the psychological, The Innocents endures as one of cinema’s finest ever ghost stories.


Saturday, February 8 at 6:15pm at the Walter Reade Theater
Sunday, February 9 at 7:30pm at the Walter Reade Theater



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The Eve of Ivan Kupalo
Yuri Ilyenko, 1968, USSR, 71m
Ukrainian with English subtitles

The Eve of Ivan Kupalo Courtesy of the Oleksandr Dovzhenko National Centre.

Loosely based on a story of the same title by Nikolai Gogol, Yuri Ilyenko’s 1968 adaptation is a visually astonishing work on the borderline between cinematic narrative and pure poetry. Humble farmer Piotr wishes to marry the beautiful Pidorka, but, of course, her father disapproves. But a mischievous demon who lives somewhere in the countryside might hold the key to Piotr being able to obtain the object of his desire, setting the stage for a Faustian bargain with otherworldly consequences. A beguiling and transfixing work in which images overflow with symbols, theological and folkloric motifs, and visual touches ranging from the surreal to the ethnographic, The Eve of Ivan Kupalo is one of Ilyenko’s richest films.


Thursday, February 6 at 8:15pm at the Francesca Beale Theater
Sunday, February 9 at 3:30pm at the Walter Reade Theater





The She-Butterfly / Leptirica
Đordje Kadijević, 1973, Serbia, 63m
Serbian with English subtitles

The She-Butterfly

A consummate work of cinematic folk-horror, Đordje Kadijević’s 1973 feature follows a young man who, in the hopes of persuading a rich, stern landowner to accept his bid to marry the landowner’s daughter, takes a job as a miller in the rural village Zaroshje. But no sooner does he start the job than a series of eerie events takes place at the flour mill, and it becomes increasingly apparent to the villagers that the mill has become home to a legendary vampire, Sava Savanović. Drawn from Milovan Glišić’s story “After 90 Years”—among the earliest modern treatments of vampires, predating Stoker’s Dracula by 17 years—and from regional folklore, The She-Butterfly is a visually and aurally rich example of an approach to horror cinema that is refreshingly distant from Hollywood’s genre conventions and tropes, and perhaps even more unsettling.

Wednesday, February 5 at 9:15pm at the Walter Reade Theater
Saturday, February 8 at 8:30pm at the Walter Reade Theater



Tickets & Details

Screenings will take place at the Walter Reade Theater and Francesca Beale Theater at Lincoln Center. Tickets will be available starting January 17, with early access for FLC members. Prices range from $12–$17, with discounted packages available for attendees seeing three or more films.



The series will present an eclectic selection of gothic and folkloric cinema, ranging from Jean Cocteau’s Beauty and the Beast to Thorold Dickinson’s The Queen of Spades, offering viewers a chance to witness the artistry and inspiration behind Eggers’s craft.

Whether you’re an Eggers devotee, a gothic cinema aficionado, or a newcomer to this hauntingly rich genre, Conjuring Nosferatu promises an unforgettable cinematic experience, bridging classic inspirations with modern filmmaking mastery.

For tickets and more information, visit Film at Lincoln Center.


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