This is Jean Rollin's first film, made in 1968. When it was first released
it was met with hostility by cinema-goers. The vampires in the film have
almost nothing in common with the vampires shown in American horror films.
"The Rape of the Vampire" begins like an exposé and ends like a dream; what
initially appears to be a rational investigation into supposed vampirism
gradually reveals itself as something far less easily dismissed.
The first part centres on four young women living in a secluded château
under the guidance of an older guardian. When journalists and sceptics
arrive, they assume they are dealing with a hoax, or at best a case of
shared delusion. The women are pale, withdrawn and oddly ceremonial in their
behaviour; they claim to be vampires who have lived for 400 years, yet show
none of the expected traits. They do not hunt, they do not display
supernatural strength, and they seem almost fragile, as if the slightest
disturbance might shatter them.
It would be easy to read them as frauds or victims of manipulation. Rollin
encourages this ambiguity by filtering their world through the intrusive,
rational gaze of the investigators. The château becomes a stage on which
belief and scepticism clash; the women are probed, questioned and ultimately
violated, both psychologically and physically.
Yet the film quietly resists the sceptics' interpretation. The more the
outsiders attempt to expose the women, the less convincing their
explanations become. The women's detachment from ordinary life, their
strange unity and their apparent disconnection from time and consequence all
suggest that they are not merely pretending. Their vampirism is not
expressed through conventional horror imagery, but through atmosphere and
persistence; they exist according to a logic that does not align with the
human world around them.
The act of violence implied by the title is crucial here. It is framed less
as titillation than as an assertion of control, an attempt by the intruders
to force the women into a recognisable, human framework. If they can be
dominated, the logic goes, they can be explained. But the effect is the
opposite. The brutality only deepens the sense that the women belong to
another order of being; they may be physically vulnerable, but they are not
reducible to the terms imposed on them.
By the time the film drifts into its more overtly surreal second half, the
question of whether the women are real vampires has already been
answered in everything but explicit statement. They are not frauds, nor are
they simply mad. Instead, Rollin presents a form of vampirism stripped of
its usual theatrical power; these are creatures defined by frailty,
isolation and an almost mournful remove from the living. Their weakness does
not negate their nature; it redefines it.
What remains is a haunting inversion of the vampire myth. Rather than
predators, these women are survivors of an existence that offers neither
release nor fulfilment. Their authenticity lies not in spectacle but in
persistence; they endure, quietly and inexplicably, beyond the reach of
those who would explain them away.


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