Welcome to the House of the Undead and Unnecessarily Stylish
Every so often, a horror film comes along that makes you question whether you should scream, applaud, or take a sip of red wine and pretend to understand French existentialism. Livid (2011), the second feature from French horror duo Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo — the twisted minds behind Inside — is that kind of movie.
It’s what happens when The Haunting, Black Swan, and Interview with the Vampire all get trapped inside a dream directed by Guillermo del Toro’s moodier cousin. It’s lush, surreal, and unashamedly gothic — the cinematic equivalent of a fever dream that smells faintly of old lace, taxidermy, and Chanel No. 5.
Plot: Or, How to Lose Your Job and Gain a Vampire Roommate
Lucy Klavel (Chloé Coulloud) is a wide-eyed young nurse in training, the kind of horror heroine who looks like she’s one bad day away from realizing ghosts are real. On her first day making house calls, she visits an old mansion straight out of a Victorian nightmare — stuffed animals everywhere, the kind of décor that screams serial killer with taxidermy hobby.
There lies Mrs. Deborah Jessel (Marie-Claude Pietragalla), a comatose former ballet instructor with a reputation for cruelty and a rumor that she’s sitting on a hidden treasure. Naturally, Lucy tells her boyfriend William and his idiot friend Ben about this supposed loot, and the trio decide to break in on Halloween night — because “trespassing in a vampire’s mansion” is a foolproof plan.
Inside, they find more weird taxidermy, creepy dolls, and — surprise — a literal vampire ballet family. Mrs. Jessel, her mute daughter Anna, and their helpful accomplice Mrs. Wilson have been running a supernatural dance school for the damned. By the time Lucy realizes the treasure isn’t gold but blood, it’s far too late.
And because this is French horror, things don’t just go wrong — they go existentially wrong. Eyes are stabbed, moths are implanted, and souls are swapped like discount handbags. By the end, Lucy and Anna’s spirits trade bodies in a ritual that’s part voodoo, part ballet recital, and entirely WTF.
A Gothic Fairy Tale With Fangs
Where Inside was raw, brutal, and about the horrors of motherhood, Livid is its poetic, fantastical sibling — less screaming, more swooning. It’s the kind of film where the horror isn’t just in the gore, but in the beauty of decay. Every frame could be a painting titled Sadness in Velvet.
Maury and Bustillo blend the dream logic of a fairy tale with the cold-blooded cruelty of a vampire story. The result feels like Sleeping Beauty if Prince Charming showed up to find out the princess was a corpse who bites.
The film oozes atmosphere: dusty chandeliers, candlelight flickering on peeling wallpaper, and ghostly ballerinas pirouetting through cobwebs. Even when someone’s being impaled, it’s done with the elegance of a fashion editorial.
If Inside was horror stripped to the bone, Livid is horror wearing a corset, sipping absinthe, and whispering poetry about death.
Lucy: The Girl Who Dances With Death
Chloé Coulloud anchors the film as Lucy, a heroine who feels less like a person and more like a porcelain doll trying very hard to feel emotions. She’s naïve but curious, fragile but determined — the perfect protagonist for a story where reality keeps melting around her.
Her descent from shy caregiver to blood-soaked survivor mirrors the fairy-tale structure beautifully. She begins as Red Riding Hood, lost in the forest of gothic excess, and ends as something closer to the wolf herself — or maybe the moth fluttering from its cocoon.
By the time Lucy (in Anna’s body) literally flies off a cliff in the finale, you’re not sure whether to applaud or call a therapist. It’s the kind of ending that’s both nonsensical and somehow deeply satisfying — like a dream you don’t understand but still can’t shake.
The Vampires: Not Your Average Twilight Couple
Forget sparkly teen vamps or debonair aristocrats — Mrs. Jessel and her daughter Anna are something altogether stranger. Jessel is the kind of vampire who probably critiques your posture before draining your blood. She’s equal parts tragic and terrifying, a once-great artist who found immortality in the worst way possible: through her own daughter’s curse.
Anna, on the other hand, is a gothic masterpiece of creepy innocence. Dressed in a ballerina tutu, pale as a ghost, and silent as death, she’s the perfect symbol of corrupted childhood. When she drinks blood, it’s less hunger and more art — a grotesque form of choreography.
Their vampirism isn’t sexy or romantic; it’s mournful. They’re relics of a decaying world — predators trapped in their own elegance. You half-expect them to sigh, “Ah, immortality, such a bore,” before stabbing someone with a hairpin.
Beauty and the Bleeding Beast
Visually, Livid is one of the most stunning horror films of the decade. The cinematography by Laurent Barès paints every shot like a baroque oil painting dipped in ghost light. The colors are muted yet lush — blacks that shimmer, whites that glow like bone. The production design turns the Jessel mansion into a character all its own, equal parts mausoleum and dreamscape.
There’s a sequence where veiled ballerinas attack in a swirl of gauze and blood that’s so visually hypnotic, you almost forget it’s horrifying. Almost.
And then there are the moths — fluttering symbols of transformation, death, and fragile beauty. When Mrs. Jessel literally implants moth pupae into Lucy’s throat, it’s grotesque but poetic, the kind of imagery that sticks in your brain like a fever dream you don’t want to wake from.
The Score: Classical Music for the Doomed
Raphaël Gesqua’s score deserves its own round of applause — if your hands aren’t too busy clutching your armrests. The music dances between melancholy piano and operatic horror, turning even the quietest scenes into miniature tragedies.
It’s the kind of soundtrack that makes you want to waltz and weep at the same time. By the end, you might not know whether you’ve watched a horror film or attended a very cursed ballet recital.
The Moral of the (Bloody) Story
Like all great fairy tales, Livid has a moral — or at least several, depending on how cynical you’re feeling.
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Don’t rob old vampire ladies. Especially if their house has more stuffed animals than a serial killer’s Etsy shop.
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Ballet is evil. This movie makes Black Swan look like Dance Moms.
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Immortality is overrated. Vampirism here isn’t glamorous — it’s a metaphor for creative obsession, for the kind of art that consumes both teacher and student.
But on a deeper level, Livid is about inheritance — both genetic and spiritual. The younger generation (Lucy and Anna) inherits the sins and sorrows of the old (Jessel). It’s about breaking cycles of control, even if that means stabbing your vampiric ballet teacher and flying off a cliff.
You know — normal life stuff.
A Beautiful Nightmare
Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo have crafted something rare: a horror film that feels like a painting come to life. It’s strange, sensual, and unapologetically French — meaning you’ll probably be a little confused, a little turned on, and slightly traumatized.
Livid isn’t a movie for everyone. If you like your horror straightforward, you’ll be lost faster than a moth in a chandelier. But if you crave atmosphere, artistry, and a touch of the absurd, it’s intoxicating.
It’s horror as high art — the kind of film where blood looks like roses, ghosts waltz instead of shriek, and the line between beauty and terror dissolves completely.
Final Curtain Call
At its best, Livid feels like a nightmare staged at the Paris Opera — ornate, morbid, and strangely touching. It’s a story about life, death, and the terrible beauty that exists between the two.
Maury and Bustillo prove that horror can still be elegant, that monsters can pirouette, and that sometimes the scariest thing isn’t death — it’s the exquisite loneliness of living forever.
Rating: 🩸🩰 4.5 out of 5 vampire tutus — one half-point deducted because I’m still not sure if I was horrified or just deeply moved by the wallpaper.

