| Date of Review |
December 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Monarch |
| Subject |
Nosferatu |
| Scale |
1/8 |
| Kit Number |
402 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Very cleanly injected! Detailed base
and creepy accessories. Lots of room for a great painting
adventure! |
| Cons |
Large parts may knock small parts off
the trees in transit. |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$29.95 |
Fans of classic monsters and classic models will enjoy this
retro inspired styrene kit from Scott McKillop at Monarch Models.
Reminiscent in lots of ways of monster and other classic kits
from a fabled old company, Monarch has captured that feeling
from our childhood for us older guys. Here’s a chance
to build and feel like that kid again, all excited and maybe
a little impatient! Hopefully, this will be, the first of many
high quality, imagination based kits from Monarch.
Nosferatu was what some have called an unauthorized movie
version of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Originally released
in 1922 by German Expressionist filmmaker F. W. Murnau, this
silent horror classic stars Max Schreck as the evil Count Orlok.
He is nosferatu, a term used in the movie in place of vampire
in some cases. The movie is the story of Thomas Hutter, an
employee of a real estate firm who lives happily who lives
happily with his wife, Ellen in a little village in Germany.
He is sent to visit Count Orlok in the Carpathian Mountains
to finalize the sale of the house across the street from his.
Near his destination, the locals at the inn he rooms at have
come to fear even mention of Orlok’s name and discourage
Hutter from continuing his journey to the castle. The carriage
driver refuses to cross the bridge to the castle, leaving Hutter
to walk until Orlok’s carriage picks him up. Early in
his visit with the Count, Hutter cuts his thumb. Orlok would
have sucked the blood out of the wound if it had not been for
the cross around Hutter’s neck stopping him. Later, they
close the deal. Hutter falls asleep in the parlor, only to
awaken later with wounds on his neck that he attributes to
mosquitoes.
Back in Germany, Hutter’s wife sleepwalks
and is found in a comatose state screaming for her husband.
The screams stop Orlok long distance from doing further violence
to Hutter who discovered in his luggage the copy of “the
Book of Vampires” that he had seen and ignored in his
room at the inn and now suspects that Orlok is indeed Nosferatu.. Exploring
the castle, he finds a crypt complete with a coffin containing
the dormant Orlok. Taken by fear, he runs back to his room
and sees Orlok loading coffins into his carriage. Orlok climbs
into the last one before the coach leaves. Hutter escapes the
castle and returns to Germany. A ship arrives with no crew
left, oodles of rats and a bunch of coffins. As expected, mayhem
ensues in the village with lots of corpses piling up. Orlok
finally gets to Ellen and drinks her blood but forgets about
the approaching dawn. A rooster crows and Orlok goes up in
smoke.
Capturing a moment out of this silent classic, the Monarch
kit contains 44 red styrene pieces injected into an all new
tool. Part trees were loose in the box along with the large,
well diagramed instruction sheet. The kit includes a very nicely
detailed castle stairway diorama base with a spooky skull,
skeleton forearm, giant centipede, giant spider with web and
two rats for your creepy modeling enjoyment. In a pose right
out of the box art, Nosferatu holds a large ring with 7 keys
on it. (Note there are 6 in the parts pictures. I found the
7th on the floor after I ha taken them.) He is very well sculpted
and the reproduction in styrene is quite remarkable. The pieces
are injected with little flash and crisp details. Despite the
healthy guide pins and sockets, the surfaces are free of sink
marks. Colorful diagrams in the instructions guide the modeler
thru the assembly. The colors in the diagrams match the paint
references in the call outs and in the pictures of the finished
kit. Two color pictures of the finished kit are also included
on the back of the instructions as additional painting references. With
the castle stairway base and all the accessories, the kit will
be a fun build ending with a nice presentation.
Nosferatu himself is engineered to assemble easily. Seams
and joints are hidden when ever possible. The head is divided
so that the face is away from any seams. All the details are
there, including his bushy eye brows and bad teeth! His skull
is also well shaped. The flash is virtually none existent and
the fit is very good. His coat is exquisitely detailed and
offers a nice chance to do some detail painting and dry brushing
to capture that crushed velvet look that so many of yesterday’s
fashion conscious vampires were wearing! Painting the face
and hands is open to creative license as the original vision
was in black and white. If you are a fan of accuracy, all you
will need to paint the kit will be grays. Otherwise, mix the
coldest, deadest looking color for the Count’s hands
and face. Have a ball with the spider and centipede and Orlok’s
suit! Lots of room on the base for some faux stone work, too!
If you’re a fan of monsters and other creepy kits, or
maybe just looking for a change of pace, this kit might be
just the ticket. Packed with great engineering a big load of
nostalgia, the Monarch Nosferatu offers a great build of a
classic movie monster. Go for the accurate black and white
or spread your creative wings and paint him up all dead. moldering
and creepy!
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