Robert Eggers Is Writing and Directing A CHRISTMAS CAROL with Willem Dafoe Eyed as Scrooge
It looks like Robert Eggers isn’t ready to leave the haunting chill of Christmas behind just yet. After Nosferatu carved out a spooky, snow-dusted corner of the holiday box office, Eggers is reportedly diving back into the winter shadows, this time, with Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol.According to Deadline, Eggers is officially set to write and direct a new adaptation of the classic ghost story for Warner Bros., and he’s crafting the role of Ebenezer Scrooge with one actor in mind… Willem Dafoe.While no deals are currently in motion, insiders say Dafoe is Eggers’ top choice to play the iconic miser. Given their creative history, it’s not hard to see why. Dafoe has been a regular fixture in Eggers’ cinematic world, appearing in The Lighthouse, The Northman, and most recently, Nosferatu. At this point, casting him as a grim, tormented old soul visited by Christmas ghosts feels like a great opportunity, and Defoe would be awesome in the role!A Christmas Carol isn’t exactly uncharted territory, it’s been adapted countless times across film, stage, and television. But Eggers’ fascination with historical detail, mood-soaked cinematography, and the supernatural makes this particular version worth paying attention to. A spectral tale of regret, redemption, and the macabre.Eggers will also produce the film alongside Chris Columbus and Eleanor Columbus under the Maiden Voyage banner, continuing a trend of filmmakers bringing their own trusted collaborators along for the ride.It doesn’t hurt that his last outing, Nosferatu, was both a critical and financial success. The gothic vampire film earned $181 million globally (including $95 million domestically) and scored four Oscar nominations in technical categories like Cinematography, Production Design, Costume Design, and Makeup and Hairstyling.Eggers is already gearing up to shoot Werwulf for Focus Features later this year. But between werewolves, vampires, and now Dickensian spirits, Eggers has carved out a unique niche as cinema’s reigning lord of the old-world supernatural, and I love it!Source: Deadline


It looks like Robert Eggers isn’t ready to leave the haunting chill of Christmas behind just yet. After Nosferatu carved out a spooky, snow-dusted corner of the holiday box office, Eggers is reportedly diving back into the winter shadows, this time, with Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol.
According to Deadline, Eggers is officially set to write and direct a new adaptation of the classic ghost story for Warner Bros., and he’s crafting the role of Ebenezer Scrooge with one actor in mind… Willem Dafoe.
While no deals are currently in motion, insiders say Dafoe is Eggers’ top choice to play the iconic miser. Given their creative history, it’s not hard to see why. Dafoe has been a regular fixture in Eggers’ cinematic world, appearing in The Lighthouse, The Northman, and most recently, Nosferatu.
At this point, casting him as a grim, tormented old soul visited by Christmas ghosts feels like a great opportunity, and Defoe would be awesome in the role!
A Christmas Carol isn’t exactly uncharted territory, it’s been adapted countless times across film, stage, and television. But Eggers’ fascination with historical detail, mood-soaked cinematography, and the supernatural makes this particular version worth paying attention to. A spectral tale of regret, redemption, and the macabre.
Eggers will also produce the film alongside Chris Columbus and Eleanor Columbus under the Maiden Voyage banner, continuing a trend of filmmakers bringing their own trusted collaborators along for the ride.
It doesn’t hurt that his last outing, Nosferatu, was both a critical and financial success. The gothic vampire film earned $181 million globally (including $95 million domestically) and scored four Oscar nominations in technical categories like Cinematography, Production Design, Costume Design, and Makeup and Hairstyling.
Eggers is already gearing up to shoot Werwulf for Focus Features later this year. But between werewolves, vampires, and now Dickensian spirits, Eggers has carved out a unique niche as cinema’s reigning lord of the old-world supernatural, and I love it!
Source: Deadline