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The case for Jean Rollin may well have been overstated. Le Frisson des Vampires, one of the lynchpins in the Rollin oeuvre, is a film that seems caught between an adolescent prurience on one hand and the arty pretensions of a first year film school student on the other. It has its occasional moments of surreal glory a vampire that sleeps inside a grandfather clock and only rises at midnight (and the accompanying image of a female victim draped willingly around the clock waiting for her to awaken); the pre-Madonna-esque image of a vampire wearing giant spiked black nipple caps; skulls in a goldfish bowl and the like. But these, which are always the points that Rollins admirers light upon, are interspersed with long moments of almost near plotless incoherence. Rollins surrealist images coffins in the middle of a ruined abbey, naked women emerging out of grandfather clocks and giant ornate chimney places seem inserted less with logical purpose in mind and more for the visual image it provides. The rest of the time the plot seems assembled in order to display as many women in a state of undress as possible. What plot there is is occasionally reminiscent of Harry Kumels Daughters of Darkness (1971) the following year, which also a featured a newlywed couple being seduced by vampires in an ornate old building. Indeed, some of the glimpses of the background here that of internecine warfare between the vampire camps over who is closest to the true bloodline offer a story that is often potentially more intriguing than the one the film has. There are elements of the film the swinging electric rock score, the zombified hippie chick disciples that go gaily dancing off together at the end that make Le Frisson des Vampires seem to be born more of drug-induced 1960s fantasia than of anything to do with the vampire film, something a number of other 1970s horror films I Drink Your Blood (1970), The Velvet Vampire (1971) and The Deathmaster (1974) also exploited. Certainly, in the burgeoning field of vampire erotica a early 1970s trend that Le Frisson des Vampires was one of the first to explore it is a film that displays its sexuality with far more confidence and openness than the giggly adolescence of Hammers The Vampire Lovers (1970) around the same time. Jean Rollins other genre films are:- Le Viol du Vampire (1967), The Naked Vampire (1970), Virgins and Vampires/Caged Virgins (1971), Virgin Among the Living Dead/Christina, Princess of Eroticism (1973), Demoniacs/Curse of the Living Dead (1974), Lips of Blood (1975), Pesticide/The Grapes of Death (1978), Fascination (1979), The Night of the Hunted (1980), Zombies Lake (1981), The Living Dead Girl (1982), Two Orphan Vampires (1997), The Fiancee of Dracula (2002) and Night of the Clocks (2007).
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