Emma Corrin made sure all eyes were on them as they attended the Nosferatu film premiere in London on Wednesday evening.
The actress, 28, put on a very risque display as they went braless beneath an elegant sheer cream dress.
Showing off their nipple piercing, the star completed the look with a pair of black strappy heels as she joined her cast members Lily-Rose Depp and Nicholas Hoult for the premiere.
Lily, 25, opted for a chic grey button up dress with an exaggerated collar and jewelled broach detailing.
The actress, who is the daughter of Johnny Depp, posed with her hand on her hips while waving to fans while her golden locks cascaded over one shoulder.
Emma Corrin put on a VERY risque display as they went braless in sheer cream dress alongside Lily-Rose Depp at the Nosferat film premiere in London on Wednesday evening
The actress, 28, made sure all eyes were on them in the elegant sheer cream dress
Nicholas, 34, looked stylish wearing a grey suit over a white shirt and black tie as he took to the red carpet.
Nosferatu is the reimagined horror flick of the 1992 cult classic and has been hailed for its likeness to the original.
The 2024 vampire gore fest features a stellar cast, including Bill Skarsgård as Count Orlok, Willem Dafoe as Prof. Albin Eberhart von Franz, Lily-Rose Depp as Ellen Hutter, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Friedrich Harding.
Directed by Robert Eggers – mastermind behind The Witch and The Lighthouse – the dark fantasy has stuck to the fictional German town of Wisborg and is set in 1838.
The plot involves real estate agent Thomas Hutter being given Count Orlok as a client.
Count Orlok is looking for a new home in town for him and his wife Ellen, but unfortunately for Thomas, the ghastly man is an ancient blood-sucking vampire.
Unlike the original, which is directed by F.W. Murnau, Ellen is now centre to the story and is now no longer just the victim.
Ellen’s backstory is uncovered in the new film and has a more active role in the plot – despite society mocking her for her alleged ‘hysteria’.
They accessorised the look with silver dangly earrings and a red lip
The actress, who is the daughter of Johnny Depp, waved to fans while her golden locks cascaded over one shoulder
She completed the look with a simple pair of black heels
Emma completed the look with black strappy heels as they held up their dress to walk the carpet
The star signed autographs as they chatted with fans
Nicholas Hoult, 34, looked stylish wearing a grey suit over a white shirt and black tie as he took to the red carpet
The star looked very dapper in the grey tweed jacket
Bill Skarsgård, who plays Count Orlok in the film, kept a serious expression as he donned his suit on the carpet
Robert was joined by his wife Alexandra Shaker who wore a simple black dress
Emma plays Anna Harding in the horror
The new remake is also said to uncover the count’s sexual side as he tells his wife that ‘he is an appetite’ before entering her body – ‘spiritually’.
Nosferatu has already won Best Original Score at the Hollywood Music In Media Awards and has received six Astra Award nominations.
And early reviews are already raving, calling the film ‘hypnotic,’ ‘devilish,’ and ‘the scariest movie since The Shining,’ as the movie posted a 95 percent on Rotten Tomatoes.
‘The film belongs to Lily-Rose Depp, whose performance is a revelation,’ declared The Hollywood Reporter, as Collider called it ‘one of the year’s best performances.’
‘Her scenes with Bill Skarsgard are electric,’ continued THR’s David Rooney. ‘Depp gives Ellen’s delirium a tragic gravity, deepening once she acknowledges the mystical forces within her that sparked the vampire’s obsession.
Lily looked in great spirits as she engaged with her fans in the crowd
Her dress was accessorised by a colourful bejewelled broach
Ralph Ineson plays Dr. Wilhelm Sievers in the film
Simon McBurney, who plays Knock, kept it casual in a black blazer jacket and black trainers and hat
Nosferatu is the reimagined horror flick of the 1992 cult classic and has been hailed for its likeness to the original
‘She can switch in an instant from weak and vulnerable to demonic, and the stylized physicality of her seizures is breathtaking.’
David also gushed over the director as he wrote: ‘The director makes even that overused modern horror trope, the jump scare, truly shocking, not just something to be instantly laughed off.
‘It’s thrilling to experience a movie so assured in the way it builds and sustains fear, so hypnotically scary as it grabs you by the throat and never lets go.’
‘Robert Eggers’ Nosferatu might be a modern horror classic, given how scarily and sensually it approaches age-old material, but makes it feel entirely new,’ agreed IGN.