

Color, 1970, 84 mins. 51 secs.
Directed by Jean Rollin
Starring Olivier Martin, Caroline Cartier, Maurice Lemaitre, Ly Lestrong, Jean Aron
Indicator (UHD & Blu-ray) (US/UK R0 4K/HD), Wicked Vision (Blu-ray & DVD) (Germany R0 HD/PAL), Kino Lorber (Blu-ray & DVD) (US RA/R1 HD/NTSC) / WS (1.66:1) (16:9), Redemption (US R1 NTSC) / WS (1.66:1)
the nearly plotless black-and-white Gothic
delirium of his first film, The Rape of the Vampire, director Jean Rollin returned to bloodsuckers again for a far more visually extreme variation that still stands apart from the rest of his filmography. Though his trademark obsessions with beachscapes and aesthetic nudity are still in evidence, the ultra-saturated color schemes and mad scientist motifs instead feel like some sort of unholy mash-up between Barbarella and The Diabolical Dr. Z (and almost never like a traditional horror film). The film kicks off with a group of hooded scientists doing something nefarious with their Bunsen burners and brightly-colored beakers, while others in their cult run around in animal masks and chase passing pedestrians. During all of this mayhem, young Pierre (Martin) is captivated with a scantily-clad woman (Cartier) who winds up apprehended by the sect, which turns out to be a more sinister and deadly group than they first appeared. Visitors commit suicide, blood drinking is involved, and as usual, it all winds up with haunted characters wandering a beach as their mortality comes back to bite them in the, uh, neck.
and Gothic elements together without really trying to scare anyone, but his poetic touch keeps the entire enterprise from becoming a nasty collision of contrasting styles.
The actors aren't required to do much beyond wandering around and acting as clotheshorses, but the limited Martin makes a reasonable enough protagonist whose past causes him to slowly unravel as the film unspools.
capture the deranged pop art flavor Rollin was going for. It's finally presented with its accurate 1.66:1 framing as well and offers a major upgrade in every department. The short film from the U.S. release and the Rollin interview from the U.K. one go bye bye, but it's a minor loss compared to the fact that you get a far superior rendering of the film along with some new extras including a Rollin video intro, a shorter interview with the director (just
under 20 minutes instead of the 40-minute one on the U.K. disc), a three-minute Natalie Perrey interview, and trailers for the first five Kino Lorber/Redemption Blu-ray Rollin titles.
if possible as the new 4K restoration really shines to the fullest there, with HDR-compatible Dolby Vision especially welcome for one of the director's most vibrant concoctions. Here you get the option to watch the film in its original French version or the genuine export English-dubbed one, which does some editorial shuffling including putting the main titles right at the beginning. The LPCM 1.0 mono tracks sound great as well and feature newly translated English subtitles as well as SDH subs for the English dub.
A new audio commentary by the always engaging Kevin Lyons and Jonathan Rigby takes you through the peculiar landscape of Rollin's cinema and touches on his manipulation of vampire, pulp novel, and comic art tropes, the transition in Euro vampire cinema taking place that would reach fruition in the more sexually liberated 1970s, comparisons to Rollin's prior feature, the reception by the French press, and the ideas established here that would blossom in his later work. Video extras here include a slight polish of the '98 Rollin intro (5m26s), an updated revision of the "Journey" featurette by Rollin assistant Daniel Gouyette as "Le Passage" (8m54s) with Natalie Perrey, Jean-Noël Delamarre, and Jean-Pierre Bouyxou, and a streamlining of the "Memories" featurette here as "Fragment d'un dialogue" (19m23s) collecting Rollin interview highlights with Gouyette from a five-year period up to 2003. New here are "An Anarchist Vampire in Paris" (5m26s), with archivist Lucas Balbo explaining how his father's friendship with Rollin and their association with the Fédération Anarchiste provided an unusual gateway to these films, and "Countercultural Gothic" (10m2s) with the always insightful Virginie Sélavy parsing out the film's place within the uniquely French strain of the hippie movement and its aesthetic ties to what was going on in pop culture. Also included are the French and English trailers, plus hefty galleries for promotional and publicity material (104 images), behind the scenes (59 images), and additional photography (46 images). The limited edition package also comes with an 80-page book with a new essay by David Jenkins, an archival Rollin intro and interview highlights from 1973 and 1996, and a dive into Lettrist artist, filmmaker, and Rollin collaborator Maurice Lemaître.
INDICATOR (Blu-ray)
WICKED VISION (Blu-ray)
KINO LORBER (Blu-ray)