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Molly-Mae Hague has admitted she “panicked” when she was asked to name her favourite film of the year on the Baftas red carpet. The former Love Island star gave a confusing response when she was quizzed by a journalist from The News Movement on her favourite release of 2025 . Hague gave the answer “I did enjoy Nosferatu ”, referring to the Oscar-nominated Robert Eggers horror film, but fans quickly pointed out that the influencer had previously posted a vlog online declaring her hatred for the horror film, giving it “a literal two out of 10”.
One fan remarked online: “She literally said on her vlog that she hated it and thought it was awful,” as another added: “Molly babe we know you didn’t like it”. One person added: “I thought she said she watched it and didn’t like it hahahaha.” Another said: “I fear Molly Mae is me whenever I'm caught off guard and say the exact opposite of what I feel.
” Hague chimed in on the comments, admitting: “Completely panicked”. In her original review of the vampire film, Hague said: “Last night guys I went to the cinema to see a horror and I was really upset because it had Lily-Rose Depp , who I’m obsessed with she’s absolutely stunning, but it was bad. I really really didn’t enjoy it.
It was a literal two out of 10.” She added that it “doesn’t take much” to impress her when watching films, adding, “I will literally watch anything”. “I would say I’m a big film fanatic,” she added.
“One of my passions is films. Going to the cinema is one of my actual favourite things to do because I love finding new good films. I’ve always loved films, especially horrors.
” The film, which was given five stars by The Independent ’s film critic Clarisse Loughrey, stars Bill Skarsgård as Count Orlok with a supporting cast that includes Willem Dafoe, Lily-Rose Depp and Nicholas Hoult. The remake of the classic 1922 horror film was nominated for four Oscars and marks Eggers’ biggest box office success to date , after his work on The Northman, The Witch and The Lighthouse . In The Independent ’s five-star review , Loughrey wrote: “In Robert Eggers’s Nosferatu , the vampire is reincarnated.
He has shed his sparkle, his languid melancholy, his cobweb-speckled absurdity. He comes for you now – yes, you – as the murmuring voice in the dark, the one that calls your desires perverse and your soul unnatural.” Loughrey added: “Eggers’s interpretation of the classic novel, via the classic silent film, is not only a luxurious, Gothic revelation – it’s also one of the most profoundly, seductively frightening horrors in years, all because its terrors seem to crawl right out from our own stomachs.
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