"Two Orphan Vampires" is Jean Rollin's 18th film, made in 1997. It's one of
his last films, but in many ways it's his most typical film. It barely
pretends to belong to the horror genre, even as it trades in vampires, blood
and nocturnal wandering. The action, if it can even be called action, is
downplayed. The film is like an abstract painting, creating emotions in
everyone who watches it.
The film follows two blind girls who live in an orphanage. What the nuns don't
know is that they're only blind in the daytime. At night they can see
everything in a blue tint. They sneak out of the orphanage to drink blood,
sometimes human blood, sometimes animals. They're not vampires in the
conventional sense. They frequently live and die. How often they remain dead varies,
but they always claw their way back to the surface. Dying is a time of rest
for them. They've lived for a long time. In the 15th Century they were
worshipped as Goddesses by the Aztecs. In a single ceremony 40,000 men were
laid out for them to feed, all of them volunteers. Towards the end of the film
we find out that they're much older, and there are hints that they've existed
since the beginning of time, before Adam and Eve.
Rollin’s pacing is always languid, but here it feels almost
defiant. Scenes linger far beyond what mainstream storytelling would allow;
conversations drift, actions feel ritualistic, and long stretches pass where
nothing much happens in a traditional sense. Yet this isn’t indulgence for its
own sake. The slow rhythm creates a kind of trance state, pulling the viewer
into the same suspended existence as the protagonists; caught between day and
night, blindness and vision, innocence and predation.
The two leads carry the film less through dialogue than presence. Their
performances are deliberately stylised, almost affectless at times, which only
adds to their otherworldly quality. They don’t behave like typical horror
figures, nor like realistic teenagers; they exist somewhere in between,
embodying Rollin’s recurring fascination with fragile, doomed femininity.
There’s an undercurrent of sadness running through everything they do, as
though their vampirism is less a curse than an extension of an already
isolated existence.
Visually, the film is steeped in a muted, dreamlike atmosphere. Rollin
contrasts the drabness of daytime interiors with the freedom of the night,
where cemeteries, empty streets and shadowy corners become spaces of strange
beauty. His usual gothic imagery is present but subdued, less about spectacle
and more about texture and feeling. The result is a Paris that feels detached
from reality; familiar, yet ghostly and removed.
Anyone approaching "Two Orphan Vampires" expecting tension, scares or even a
clear narrative arc will likely come away frustrated. This is a film that
resists those pleasures almost entirely. But for those willing to meet it on
its own terms, it offers something rarer; a melancholy, dreamlike meditation
on isolation, identity and the strange freedoms of the night. It’s less a
story you follow than a mood you inhabit, and it lingers precisely because it
never fully resolves into something concrete.

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