Un par de adolescentes ciegas de día, pero cuando se pone el sol, deambulan por las calles para saciar su sed de sangre.Un par de adolescentes ciegas de día, pero cuando se pone el sol, deambulan por las calles para saciar su sed de sangre.Un par de adolescentes ciegas de día, pero cuando se pone el sol, deambulan por las calles para saciar su sed de sangre.
- Henriette
- (as Issabelle Teboul)
- Mère Supérieure
- (as Anne Duguël)
- La femme du Bigot
- (as Paulette Jeauffre)
Opiniones destacadas
This movie is a rare exception. Two blind girls (supposedly around the 15-16 yr mark, although the actresses seem to be late teens/early twenties) live at a Catholic orphanage/school. However, at night they can see because they're actually vampires, who after 'lights out' leave the orphanage to hunt. These vampires are more along the lines of Stoker's Dracula; they can move around in daylight, but their vampire abilities only manifest at night when their sight returns and they sprout fangs.
There are several kills (six, by my count), but a fair amount of time is also spent lying around in cemeteries as the girls reminisce about their previous lives (it seems they've been hunted, destroyed, and resurrected several times over 500 years) as well as try to remember who they were before they became vampires. Alexandra Pic (looking like a cross between young Ellen Page and young Jennifer Connelly) and Isabelle Teboul have an ethereal presence as the two girls, and there are cameos by Rollin favourites Tina Aumont and Brigitte Lahaie. It's about 10 minutes too long, and there are still some things that don't make any sense - but that's Rollin. It's slow but very watchable. Some nudity - but for Rollin, not much. 7/10.
Rollin's filmic obsession with vampires- and let's face it, with erotic young women- has never looked this beautiful. Like many films to come out of Europe, this eschews huge action and movement in favour of stillness and thought. It's beautiful to look at, and within the frame Rollin has trapped a whole other world- a vivid, colourful world of rich tones and contrasts, waif-like vampires and deep brown earth. Like some kind of comfortable dream on a hot Summer's evening, 'Two Orphan Vampires' slides from plot point to plot point at its own leisure. At times there's not a lot going on; but there's always something to look at.
Perhaps the most astonishing thing about the film, is the way in which Rollin makes the tiny budget work to his advantage. We meet a vampire queen, a ghoul and a werewolf. But we are only *told* this is what they are- they appear outwardly 'normal'... and although it's a cliche to say 'our imaginations do the rest', here it is so true. Late in the film there is a scene in which one of the characters explains some of her past; stuff that Hollywood would salivate over. Rollin has her hunched over a table and s-l-o-w-l-y tracks the camera towards her. No fuss, no noise, no elaborately staged flash-backs and set-pieces. Stillness. Quiet. And an otherworldliness that will leave you changed. It's like looking at a painting that illustrates a poem you strongly admire, and finding the artist has got it just 'right'. 'Two Orphan Vampires' is a tribute to the enduring presence of Jean Rollin- a writer/director of integrity, vision and wit.
Steev
This DVD has some serious compression problems. Everytime the camera pans to the left or right, the whole screen gets blurry. Plus whenever the characters move, it looks like the speed has been turned down half a notch.
That said, the film itself is a low budget affair (which is a typical feature of Jean Rollin's films) about two female vampires who are blind during the day, but can see at night. They have lived throughout eternity, being killed off occasionally through the ages, only to be resurrected later. By what, this is never explained.
No where near as good as Rollin's THE GRAPES OF DEATH or his later film FASCINATION, but there are worse such as the schlock Jess Franco puts out. The film goes on about 20 minutes too long with a lot of pointless talk about how mankind just doesn't understand them and that they have to kill in order to keep existing in the neverworld that they are condemned to live in.
All this talk just bores the hell out of me. 3 out of 10
** (out of 4)
Later day Rollin film about two sisters who are blind during the day but at night can see blue as they stalk the streets of Paris looking for blood. This is certainly a very big departure for Rollin especially when compared to his more famous, early 70's vampire films. Whereas his earlier films were full of sex, blood and violence, this one here is pretty darn close to PG-rated, although there are a few shots of bloody lips and one brief scene of a woman's breasts. This is a rather strange film to review because on one hand it's not very good but on the other I somewhat respect what Rollin was going for. I think the best thing about the film is the atmosphere Rollin creates with his small budget. As with many Rollin films, this one here moves too slowly, which is the ultimate death key. The film comes close to 105-minutes, which feels twice as long once you get to the half way point. Another problem is that the dialogue is among the worst I've ever heard and I'd swear that a two-year-old wrote it. Alexandra Pic and Isabelle Teboul turn in fairly good performances as the teenage vampires.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaVéronique Djaouti broke three vertebrae wearing the bat wings. She did the role out of friendship to Jean Rollin and refused to sue him despite permanent damage.
- Citas
Henriette: Our day for us is blue.
Louise: The light for us is black...
Henriette: ...and other people's sun has made us blind...
Louise: ...but when it is hidden...
Henriette: ...our dream begins.
Louise: They'll never know.
Henriette: The two blind orphans can see at night...
Louise: ...like the cat!
Henriette: Like the tiger! Like the beasts!
Louise: Want to go for a walk?
Henriette: He sleeps like a rock.
Louise: I'm hungry!
Henriette: We'll go find one of our true homes - I can feel one close by!
- ConexionesFeatured in Eurotika!: Vampires and Virgins (1999)
- Bandas sonorasBlue Visions (Les Orphelines Vampires)
Written by Philippe d'Aram, Performed by Philippe D'Aram & Ars Antigua
Selecciones populares
- How long is Two Orphan Vampires?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Two Orphan Vampires
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- FRF 3,000,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 47min(107 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1