July 9 - 8:30pm
Carl Dreyer (1932) 70 mins

Dreyer’s memorable, unofficial retelling of the Bram Stoker classic is marked by a concern for the oneiric & the interplay of light & shadow. With Rudolph Maté’s cinematography imbuing the film with a dreamlike reality suggestive of the liminal realm of the vampire, Dreyer went far beyond the purely Gothic, creating a horror film that not only contains a number of the most unsettling images in cinema history (including the point-of-view of a body being led to burial) but that makes most other examples pale into insignificance.
35mm print courtesy of Danish Film Institute.
* Followed by Once Upon a Time at 9.50pm. Preceded by The Passion of Joan of Arc at 7.00pm.
* Screens as part of the Carl Dreyer Season.