Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA young woman discovers that the pesticide being sprayed on vineyards is turning people into killer zombies.A young woman discovers that the pesticide being sprayed on vineyards is turning people into killer zombies.A young woman discovers that the pesticide being sprayed on vineyards is turning people into killer zombies.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Marie-Georges Pascal
- Élisabeth
- (as Marie George Pascal)
Félix Marten
- Paul
- (as Felix Marten)
Brigitte Lahaie
- La grande femme blonde
- (as Brigitte Lahaye)
Yannick Josse
- L'épouse égorgée de Lucien
- (non crédité)
Guillaume Le Vacher
- Le mort-vivant adolescent
- (non crédité)
Raphaël Marongiu
- Le cadavre dans le pressoir
- (non crédité)
Jean Rollin
- Le viticulteur
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
This neglected cult classic is finally available for the first time in the States, on DVD with a gorgeous looking (and sounding) transfer by Synapse Films. It looks great - probably better than it did in the theatres. Not exactly a zombie flick, but that is the closest genre you could categorize it. It follows the trials of Elizabeth, a young woman traveling by rail across the French countryside, en route to meet with her fiancé, who runs a winery. Before she reaches her destination however, she encounters a homicidal man who has just murdered her traveling companion, and whose face disintegrates before her horrified eyes as he chases her off the train. Lost in the rural expanse, the woman encounters various peasants who seem to have become trapped between life and death, driven mad by the pain of decaying alive, and more than eager to throttle her and visit various abuses upon her body (implied by the fact that any uninfected individual she comes across in her adventure inevitably takes the proverbial bullet for her - by pitchfork, hatchet, or whatever lethal tool the living `dead' have at hand at the moment). Finally, it is revealed that her fiancé has been pumping out wine tainted by pesticides, which has been consumed en masse earlier at a festival by the unfortunate villagers (talk about becoming dead drunk.). This is easily one of Rollin's most accessible films, but may not be to the tastes of anyone weaned on Empty-Vee styled horror flicks. But for the discriminating palate, this is definitely recommended -- leisurely paced, atmospheric, and with liberal dollops of gore and mayhem to boot, this is late 70's horror at its best.
THE GRAPES OF DEATH is Director Jean Rollin's gory, gushy chemical-zombie movie. Far more grim and gruesome than most Rollin offerings, there's less nudity as well. There are no real instances of surrealism or metaphysical irony here. This is a straight horror film. The title comes in, since the trouble starts in a vineyard where pesticides turn a man into a murdering monster who attacks a passenger train. A female survivor finds herself at the very same vineyard. More terror ensues. One of Rollin's best efforts, complete with some actual chills. Great, bloody fun for the fear freak!...
Rollin's "big" budget films rewards the viewer tremendously. Raisins de la Morte has been called the first French gore film, yet it is worth seeing for more than its few baser thrills. The whole movie is like a particularly convincing claustrophobic dream. Novice explorers of the European horror film or general fans of the zombie genre should be captured by the compact story of the lost girl in the near ancient village of zombies created by an uncannily debilitating batch of wine. Rollin's skill at creating the feel of a bad dream, however, is shown in the opening train scene. An extremely effective tracking shot of a nearly empty train car sets the tone of isolation and danger perfectly.
Agent Orange meets Fulci with a dash of Romero with lovely cinematography n surrealistic atmosphere.
I saw this for the first time recently.
The film's gore may remind viewers of Fulci. The settings may remind of Who Can kill a Child and Tombs of the blind Dead.
The film has lingering shots of oozing stuff n nasty ulcers, it has nudity, a decapitation n hell lottuva weirdness.
Dont worry about the oozing ulcers, we have porn actress Brigitte Lahaie, who doesnt hesitate to undress.
In one scene a woman is shown wearing a red shirt n the next she is shown wearing a braless gown.
The best part about this film is Jean Rollin's exquisite cinematography and surrealistic atmosphere throughout.
Fans of Jean Rollin will not be disappointed. This film capitalizes on many of the staples that make his films unique. There is a pretty gal traveling all over the French countryside facing peril, atmospheric and lingering cinematography, a quirky soundtrack, breasts, a tragic love story, and plenty of surprises to keep viewers guessing. Add the special appearance by the lovely Brigitte Lahaie and you've got a winner, but certainly lacking the cohesion (though wildly subversive and surreal -- though not so bizarre as Jess Franco's pictures) and tension of some of his more successful ventures like La Morte Vivante (The Living Dead Girl), Requiem for a Vampire, The Shiver of the Vampires and others.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAccording to director Jean Rollin while shooting the nude scene with Brigitte Lahaie the outside temperature was so cold that Lahaie couldn't speak her lines.
- GaffesDuring the long zoom in the scene where Élisabeth meets the blind girl at the deserted valley, a man can be seen walking in the distance.
- Versions alternativesAlthough the Film is banned in Germany, an uncut DVD Release was released. The DVD is not proved. A cut Version is released with an FSK Rating and signed with "neue Version".
- ConnexionsFeatured in Eurotika!: Vampires and Virgins (1999)
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- How long is The Grapes of Death?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Pesticide
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
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