Fascination (1979) on Blu-Ray
Fascination, released in 1979, was the last film in Jean Rollin’s original cycle of vampire films which had started with Le viol du vampire in 1968, although he would return to the vampire theme in the late 1990s with Two Orphan Vampires.
If you’re unfamiliar with his work Fascination
is not a bad place to start – the surrealist elements always present in
his movies are less extreme in this one, or at least they’re less
overwhelming. It also has (by the standards of a Rollin movie) a
coherent plot. In the late 70s Rollin was moving towards a slightly more accessible style, but without sacrificing the strengths of his earlier productions. Fascination is still a million miles away from Hollywood notions of horror.
Right from the start we find ourselves in the world of
Rollinesque surrealism, a surrealism liberally laced with decadence. We
see two girls dancing on a stone bridge with a phonograph sitting on the
roadway of the bridge. We then move to a slaughterhouse where two women
are drinking ox blood from wine glasses. This scene was probably
inspired by a short story, The Glass of Blood, by the French
decadent poet and novelist Jean Lorrain (1855-1906). Lorrain’s story was
in turn inspired by a somewhat bizarre real-life practice of the time
in which wealthy people suffering from anaemia or similar disorders
would start their day with a glass of cow’s blood at a local
slaughter-house.
This strange obsession with blood provides the theme of
the movie, another of Rollin’s very unconventional filmic explorations
of vampirism. Oddly enough though the element of vampirism is downplayed
for most of the film, only becoming explicit at the end (and even then
it’s still more than a little ambiguous).
The story proper begins with a falling-out among a
group of thieves, one of whom takes shelter in an apparently deserted
château. The château is not quite deserted however. Marc (for that is
the thief’s name) soon encounters two rather unsettling young women, Eva
(Brigitte Lahaie) and Elisabeth (Franca Maï), whose interest in him is
obviously sexual but equally obviously goes beyond the merely sexual. He
is warned not to stay around until dark, as they are having other
guests, apparently very dangerous ones. His problem is that he cannot
leave because the other apaches, his former confederates, are waiting
for him outside and they are armed.
Whether Eva and Elisabeth really want him to stay or
not is rather uncertain. Elisabeth seems to be very attracted to him and
(for reasons that will later become clear) that may be why she seems to
hope he will leave.
The château is surrounded by a moat and the only means
of entrance (or exit) is by means of a stone bridge. He seems to be
comprehensively trapped, at least until Eva takes a hand. In one of the
most iconic scenes of 1970s horror she deals with his quondam
accomplices rather effectively by means of a scythe.
Still Marc does not leave. The other guests arrive, all
women and all behaving in a strange manner that is both seductive and
vaguely menacing although Marc is too arrogant to take the hints of
menace seriously. He is too intrigued, too fascinated, to leave. Staying
at the château may prove to have been a rather serious mistake once the
actual nature of the planned festivities becomes clear.
Fascination has the lyrical, poetic visual style you
expect from Rollin. It also has extremely competent acting, with
Brigitte Lahaie and Franca Maï as the two disturbing young women and
Jean-Marie Lemaire as the thief on the run all giving strong
performances.
The elegant chateau provides a perfect setting for a
Rollin film. The movie is set in the early years of the 20th century and
captures the feel of fin de siècle decadence very effectively. If
you’re already a fan of Rollin’s brand of poetic and deliciously
perverse erotic horror you won’t be disappointed by this movie.
Rollin was first and foremost a visual stylist. One
gets the feeling that plotting only interested Rollin insofar as it
contributed to the atmosphere and provided the excuse for creating
striking images. In this case the plot, while rather thin, is relatively
straightforward. The surrealism comes from the manner in which the
story is told and from the imagery.
Of course a Rollin vampire movie is going to feature
lesbianism. While this was obviously good for the box-office it does
serve a genuine purpose, lesbianism being (like vampirism) a sterile and
rather self-reflexive kind of sexuality.
Interestingly enough, considering its release date, Fascination
is fairly light on gore. Even the sex and nudity is even, by late 70s
standards, rather restrained. In fact restraint is a hallmark of this
particular film and it proves to be one of its strengths. Rollin’s aim
was always to create a feeling of mystery and in this case the
downplaying of the gore is accompanied by increased emphasis on mood.
This is a movie that is for the most part subtly unsettling rather than
shocking, which makes the few shocking moments all the more effective.
In some ways it’s much more reminiscent of his 1973 non-vampire movie The Iron Rose than of his earlier vampire movies. It could in fact be argued that Fascination is not a vampire movie at all, but rather a movie about a group of women fatally fascinated by the vampire myth.
Rollin was never especially interested in horror as such, belonging more to the French tradition of le fantastique.
He liked vampires not because they were frightening but because they
were entrancing, creatures adrift in time and out of place in the real
world. He was more anxious to create a sense of wonder suffused with
melancholy than to scare his audience. That counted against him at the
time but has worked in his favour as far as his enduring reputation is
concerned.
Redemption’s Blu-Ray release is quite stunning and is a
vast improvement over their old DVD release. Picture quality is
pleasingly crisp and the colours and strong and vibrant. The extras
include an episode of a 1999 TV documentary series called Eurotika
dealing with European cult cinema, an episode that includes an extended
interview with the director, and a booklet containing a perceptive
essay on Rollin by Tim Lucas.
Fascination was one of Rollin’s most
commercially successful movies and it’s also one of his most
artistically satisfying creations. Very highly recommended.
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