The Disappearance of the ”Nosferatu” Skull

Nosferatu: W.F. Murnau

The Disappearance of the Nosferatu Skull sm 1 1
Local authorities report the mysterious disappearance of the skull of German director F.W. Murnau (1888-1931), creator of the gigantic classic of expressionism from the ’20s: Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens), a free adaptation of Bram Stoker’s vampire novel: Dracula (Dracula).
Since his untimely death in 1931, due to a car accident before the premiere of his last film, Tabu, the body of W.F. Murnau was buried in a family plot at Stahnsdorf Cemetery, Germany.
In July 2015, a group of fans of the director reported to local authorities that the grave of W.F. Murnau had been desecrated.
Initially, remains of black wax, perhaps a residual product of candles used in some kind of satanic ritual, were found just below the beautiful tombstone designed by artist Ludwig Manzel.
Similar remains suggesting the presence of black rites had already been found in other cemeteries associated with vampires, for example, in Highgate Cemetery.
Subsequent investigations yielded even more chilling data.
The skull of W.F. Murnau had mysteriously disappeared, undoubtedly taken by the perpetrators of that black mass, which in a way reminds of the old legends about how to kill vampires.
Recall that, in the year 2000, W.F. Murnau had already been linked to a case of vampirism, this time in the film: The Shadow of the Vampire, where he is portrayed as a ruthless film director who used a real vampire to play the mythical Count Orlock.

https://dimidesan.com/renfield-syndrome-and-vampirism-as-a-mental-illness/

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