Review of Shadow of the Vampire (2000) by Peter Rainer for New York Magazine/Vulture — 25 Sep 2002
It's a marvelous, resonant joke that never quite succeeds: Stretches of the film resemble a Dario Argento horrorfest crossed with a Mel Brooks spoof. But the director, E. Elias Merhige, and his screenwriter, Steven Katz, occasionally bring some rapture to the creepiness, and Dafoe's vampire, with his graceful, ritualistic death lunges, is a sinewy, skull-and-crossbones horror who seems to come less out of the German Expressionist tradition than from Kabuki.
You can read the full review where it was originally posted online.
This review of Shadow of the Vampire (2000) was written by Peter Rainer and published by New York Magazine/Vulture on 25 Sep 2002.
Shadow of the Vampire has generally received positive reviews.
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