In Robert Eggers’Nosferatu,Count Orlok kills his victims by sucking their blood, but rather than going for their necks, he feeds from their chests, and this difference actually has a lot more meaning than audiences might think. Based on the 1922 movie,Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror,which itself wasbased on Bram Stoker’sDracula,Eggers’Nosferatucenters onEllen, a young woman who suffers from horrific nightmaresas her husband goes to meet the mysterious and terrifying Count Orlok. Soon enough, Ellen’s night terrors begin to have real-life effects on those she loves.

Eggers has long been known for his dark, atmospheric filmmaking and his affection for folklore, so remakingNosferatuisn’t completely out of left field for the director. As previously mentioned,2024’sNosferatufollows in the footsteps of several other, much older stories.In this way, Eggers had to decide which elements ofthe originalNosferatustorythat he wanted to keep, and which details would have to be changed so he could stake his own claim in the tale. Ultimately, Count Orlok’s blood-sucking habits are seemingly minor aspects of the movie, but actually have real significance.

Nicholas Hoult’s Thomas stares at Bill Skarsgard’s out of focus Orlok in Nosferatu

Count Orlok’s Blood Drinking Method In Nosferatu Is A Reference To Old Folklore

How Orlok’s Blood Drinking Changes Nosferatu

According to Eggers,Count Orlok drinks blood from his victims' chestsrather than their necks because that was the belief in old folklore. In an interview withGamesRadar+,Eggers revealed that “in folklore, when people are experiencing vampiric attacks it’s similar to old hag syndrome [a colloquial term for sleep paralysis] where you have pressure on your chest, so people interpreted it as vampires drinking blood from their chest.” In this way,going for the chest rather than the neck makes Eggers' Orlok parallel the vampires of folklorerather than the movie monsters audiences are familiar with.

Is Count Orlok A Vampire Or Demon? Nosferatu’s Status Explained

Nosferatu seems to refer to Bill Skarsgard’s villain Count Orlok as a demon and a vampire interchangeably, but which one is he and why does it matter?

No matter where Orlok attacks his victims, this detail doesn’t truly change much forNosferatu,or at least not on a big scale. Either way, his victims are being abused and killed due to his actions. However,Orlok’s use of the chest does act as a slight dissonance from what viewers might have been expecting from a Hollywood vampire, and this helps Eggers’Nosferatustand out. In reality, Orlok subverts expectations in countless ways. From his choice of chest over neck to his mustached face, Count Orlok makes himself deeply memorable in all aspects.

Thomas Hutter (Nicholas Hoult) bewildered, watches as Ellen Hutter (Lily-Rose Depp) laughs maniacally in Nosferatu

Nosferatu Drinking Blood From The Chest Doesn’t Make Sense (& Robert Eggers Knows It)

Orlok’s Blood-Sucking Logic Doesn’t Really Matter

The only problem that really stands out about Count Orlok’s blood-sucking is that it would be impossible for someone to suck blood from a human’s chest. Even Eggers knows this and admits it in his interview. He says, “Now obviously you can’t pierce a breastbone, so it doesn’t really make sense. It makes much more sense to drink someone’s blood from their neck.” Because of this,some could argue that Orlok’s preference for the chest isn’t realistic, and should have changed. Yet, a fantasy horror movie likeNosferatu, doesn’t really need accuracy to be good.

It is easy to poke holes in the logic ofNosferatu’sblood-sucking, but at the end of the day, this is not a movie that is going for realism.

Lily-Rose Depp as Ellen sleepwalking in the dark in Nosferatu 2024

It is easy to poke holes in the logic ofNosferatu’sblood-sucking, but at the end of the day, this is not a movie that is going for realism.Orlok is able to suck his victims' blood from their chests because he is a being that is beyond the human world, and who has powers that defy reality. He isn’t supposed to be authentic, but horrifying. Arguably, countless other elements ofNosferatuaren’t entirely believable either, fromEllen’s night terrorsto Dr. Von Franz’s mysticism, but they evoke strong emotions, and that is the true point of the movie.

Nosferatu Changing How Count Orlok Drinks Blood Is Tied To Robert Eggers' Approach

Eggers' Movies Are Better For His Attention To Detail

Ultimately, Eggers choosing to make Orlok drink blood from the chest is simply a testament to his filmmaking style. Eggers is deeply concerned with folklore, and he only makes these small, discreet choices in order to be closer to the source material.Orlok’s blood-sucking is not just an arbitrary change to makeNosferatustand out, but is a thoughtful piece of workthat adds to the character and the story as a whole. It might seem like a tiny detail, but it proves Eggers' commitment to his own projects and their authenticity.

In the end, this is only one way in whichEggers makes his moviesbetter.Nosferatuhas plenty of details that make the film feel so much deeperand more evocative, aside from the blood-sucking. For example, Bill Skarsgård’s voice modulations for Count Orlok made him so much scarier, and the cast’s period-specific costumes helped set the tone for the rest of the film. All in all, Robert Eggers succeeded at building a thought-provoking world inside ofNosferatu.

Nosferatu (2024) Official Poster