Count Orlok
Count Orlok, also known as Nosferatu, is the central antagonist and titular vampire in the 1922 German Expressionist silent horror film Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror, directed by F.W. Murnau and portrayed by actor Max Schreck.[1][2]
The character serves as a reimagined version of Bram Stoker's Count Dracula, with Orlok depicted as a gaunt, bald, rat-like undead nobleman from Transylvania who travels to Wisborg, Germany, transporting coffins filled with plague-infected earth and rats, thereby spreading death and feeding on victims' blood through bites on the neck or chest.[3][4]
As an unauthorized adaptation of Dracula, the film renamed the vampire Orlok and altered other elements to evade copyright infringement, yet it faced a successful plagiarism lawsuit from Stoker's widow Florence in 1925, resulting in court orders across Europe to destroy all prints and negatives, though pirated copies preserved its survival and enduring legacy in cinema.[5][6][7]
Orlok's portrayal, marked by elongated fingers, pointed ears, and shadow-independent movement, established early vampire iconography distinct from later suave depictions, influencing horror aesthetics through its emphasis on decay, pestilence, and primal terror rather than seduction.[2][8]