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  • Le frisson des vampires (1971) – A Fever Dream of Coffins, Cousins, and Clock-Dwelling Vampires

Le frisson des vampires (1971) – A Fever Dream of Coffins, Cousins, and Clock-Dwelling Vampires

Posted on August 4, 2025 By admin No Comments on Le frisson des vampires (1971) – A Fever Dream of Coffins, Cousins, and Clock-Dwelling Vampires
Reviews

Jean Rollin didn’t make vampire films so much as he made vampire hallucinations. Le frisson des vampires (aka The Shiver of the Vampires) is less a narrative than it is a series of fevered snapshots strung together with eyeliner, cemetery fog, and breasts that deserve their own screen credit. And honestly? That’s the fun of it.

Plot: The Honeymoon from Hell

Isle and Antoine, a pair of newlyweds who look like they wandered out of a French pop album cover, decide to honeymoon at the crumbling castle of Isle’s cousins. Only problem? The cousins are dead. Or not dead. Or sort of undead. Depends on whether you’re awake, dreaming, or just drunk on Rollin’s idea of continuity.

Isle wanders into a cemetery, gets bitten by a woman who climbs out of a grandfather clock (because of course she does), and then finds out her cousins are alive and now vampires. Antoine, meanwhile, spends most of the film sulking like a man who married above his pay grade, occasionally bludgeoned unconscious by falling library books.

Things escalate into nipple torture, rape, and ritual ceremonies that feel like a mix of Scooby-Doo and softcore porn shot on an abandoned Catholic set. By the time Isle starts burning in sunlight, you realize the honeymoon’s over—and so is Antoine’s shot at a normal marriage.


Performances: Vampires Who Majored in Theater Arts

Sandra Julien (Isle) spends most of her time looking beautiful and confused, which—given the script—is as much as anyone can reasonably expect. Jean-Marie Durand (Antoine) has the energy of a man perpetually asking, “Wait, is this scene real, or am I dreaming?” Michel Delahaye and Jacques Robiolles, as the cousins, chew scenery with the enthusiasm of vampires who clearly went to art school.

And then there’s Dominique as Isolde, emerging from clocks and seducing women like she’s auditioning for the world’s most confusing perfume ad.


Style: Rollin Being Rollin

Nobody does atmosphere like Rollin. The film is drenched in cemetery fog, bathed in lurid color, and scored like a psychedelic garage band trying to exorcise their hangover. The visuals are stunning—castle ruins, beaches at dawn, vampires perched on gravestones like runway models—and yet the whole thing moves with the dream logic of someone who accidentally drank too much cough syrup.

Rollin has always been the French poet of vampire boobs, and this one doubles down on the formula: gothic erotica meets avant-garde nonsense.


Final Verdict

Le frisson des vampires is baffling, beautiful, and absolutely bonkers. It’s not so much a vampire movie as a surreal séance where the plot is optional and the cleavage mandatory. Rollin’s vampires don’t just drink blood—they drink your ability to expect sense from cinema.

⭐ Rating: 4 out of 5 coffin-shaped clocks.
Because sometimes you don’t want a story. Sometimes you want vampires in nipple armor stabbing people at random while your brain quietly whispers, “What the hell am I watching?”

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