DAUGHTERS
OF DARKNESS (1971)/THE BLOOD SPATTERED BRIDE
(1972) (Blu-ray)One of a handful of early 1970s films dealing with the true-life exploits of Countess Elisabeth Bathory (Peter Sasdy's COUNTESS DRACULA and Jorge Grau's THE FEMALE BUTCHER being other prime examples), DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS is a Belgium production directed by film teacher Harry Kümel, and his only one shot in the English language. After a number of DVD issues (including an early one from Anchor Bay), Blue Underground has taken the leap and released this erotic vampire favorite on Blu-ray disc.
Young
Valerie and Stefan (Canadian-born actress Danielle Ouimet and John Karlen of
"Dark Shadows" and "Cagney & Lacey" fame) are a honeymooning
couple staying at a seaside hotel during the off season. It is there that they
encounter the Hungarian Countess Bathory (Delphine Seyrig) and her brunette
companion Ilona (beautiful Andrea Rau) who become the only other visitors to
the hotel. The Countess tells the couple of her ancestor's blood-soaked activities,
but she is actually the perpetuator in question, living on through the ages
and retaining a youthful appearance. The Countess becomes passionately obsessed
with Valerie, and slowly woos her away from her husband who in turn is seduced
by Ilona. The couple appears unstable to begin with, but having a third party
interfering with their relationship leads to accidental death, followed by further
deviance and doomed sexual ecstasy.
Kümel's
dreamlike erotic vampire film is an alluring piece of art with a slight camp
edge to it. Not as bizarre as Jean Rollin's vampiric indulgences, and not nearly
as commercial as the Hammer films of the period, its atypical style is nonetheless
triumphant. Seyrig's smiling but fangless baroness is played to perfection,
looking like a 1930s movie queen, and quite credible as being immortal. The
acting and dialog is sharp throughout, as Kümel lets the film focus on
four main quirky characters, with several outside eccentrics frequently lending
to the scheme of things. The Hotel Astoria in Brussels provides a landscape
of isolation and death, and the camerawork is remarkable throughout. Not the
traditional lesbian vampire movie in the over-exploitive sense, the film still
has enough nudity and sexual tension to classify it as such. Slowly paced and
thinly plotted, this one is not for gorehounds, but it does boast three of the
most unique death scenes on celluloid, all laced with comic book violence.
As
stated before, DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS was previously available long ago as a
DVD release from Anchor Bay, and then Blue Underground issued it again in 2003
and 2006. For this Blu-ray disc, the transfer reflects a noticeable jump in
quality, and the film looks far better than it ever did before. The 1080 progressive
anamorphic widescreen transfer preserves the film's intended 1.66:1 aspect ratio,
with detail being extremely crisp and colors bold and impressive. Grain is essentially
non-existent, and darker scenes that were once too dark are now much easier
to make out, and facial close-ups have an especially like-like appearance in
the very smooth overall appearance. Two flawless sounding audio options are
included: a DTS-HD mono mix of the original English track, as well as a DTS-HD
mono mix in French. Subtitle are included in English SDH, French, Spanish and
English for the French language version.
Blue
Underground includes a number of nice extras which are recycled from the previous
two DVD editions. There’s a commentary (originally recorded for the 2003
BU release) with director Kümel, moderated by David Gregory. Kümel
has a great memory for details, analyzing some of the better shots in the film
and discussing the locations and working with the actors, and his true love
of cinema is evident. A second audio commentary track has star Karlen and writer
David Del Valle. This commentary was originally recorded for the Roan laserdisc,
and was then included on the Anchor Bay DVD as well. If you haven't heard this
track yet, it's well worth a listen, being entertaining and full of the good-humored
actor's great reminisces about making the film.
This
Blu-ray release contains all the featurettes found on the previous DVD releases.
“Locations of Darkness” (20 minutes) contains interviews with Harry
Kümel and co-writer/producer Pierre Drouot. Both gentlemen re-visit the
two main hotel locations (together they double for one hotel in the film) where
a bulk of DAUGHTERS was shot, as they reminisce about specific scenes, how the
film came together, and their mutual admiration for lead actress Seyrig. “Playing
the Victim” (15 minutes) is an interview with star Danielle Ouimet, as
she gleefully talks about her experiences making DAUGHTERS, including her working
relationship with Kümel and the other players. Quimet also exclaims that
she loves the film and thinks it’s the best of the 13 she appeared in.
A pick-up from the 2003 BU disc is an 8-minute video interview with star Andrea
Rau ("Daughter of Darkness"). The German actress speaks in her native
tongue (with English subtitles of course) and discusses her early days as a
model, acting in DAUGHTERS, and her working relationship with Kümel and
Seyrig, as well as what she's been up to in the years since making it. There
is also an American theatrical trailer, and four different American radio spots
that make the film sound like a AIP/drive-in-type release!
This
Blu-ray includes as a bonus feature the Spanish-horror opus THE BLOOD SPATTERED
BRIDE, another erotically charged effort based on J. Sheridan Le Fanu's vampire
novella, Carmilla. A young man (Simón Andreu) goes on a honeymoon
with his even younger wife Susan (Maribel Martin). After the girl fantasizes
about being raped, she begs her husband to leave the hotel that they're staying
at. They wind up at the castle of her husband's family, the Karsteins (sic)
that is. Susan then has further hallucinations about a mysterious bride, Mircalla
(Alexandro Bastedo) who later ends up as a guest at the castle. Mircalla completely
absorbs the naive girl's well being, showing a deep hatred for men, and hence
inaugurating a spree of bloodshed.
Like DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS
and Jean Rollin's erotic vampire thrillers of the same period, Vincent Aranda’s
BLOOD SPATTERED BRIDE contains nudity and gore amidst the usual gothic European
surroundings. However, this film does not wallow in endless softcore lesbian
lovemaking scenes, but rather exploits the kinship between the two female antagonists
with stylized class. The nudity is limited; Maribel Martin -- star of other
vital Spanish horror romps like THE HOUSE THAT SCREAMED (1969) and A BELL FROM
HELL (1973) -- was still a teenager when this was made and her skin scenes are
obviously performed by a double. British actress Bastedo (she was in Freddie
Francis’ THE GHOUL, 1974), who actually does disrobe, is
stunning
as the blonde bloodsucker, strolling about in low cut gowns.
Although sluggish in pacing, the film still succeeds and is a favorite amongst Euro horror buffs. Most of the meat is in the third act, but the discovery of the vampire Mircalla -- buried in the beach sand, breathing through a snorkel and having her bare breasts dug out -- is unforgettable. A dream sequence where a man has his heart torn out (trimmed for the original U.S. version, but fully intact here) is also particularly nasty. The climax is also very chaotic, but an infamous, longer, extended heart-cutting scene has been rumored about for years, and apparently doesn't exist at all. Like in the U.S. prints, this business is accented by an insert shot of a newspaper with a headline describing the ghastly incident.
As
with previous DVD releases of THE BLOOD SPATTERED BRIDE, the film runs 101 minutes,
roughly 20 minutes longer than the U.S. version that most of us had witnesssed
when MPI/Gorgon released it on video in the 1980s. The extra time is allotted
for the aforementioned gore and nudity, as well as some significant character
development. The film is presented in its original 1.85:1 aspect ratio with
anamorphic enhancement (as with most of the extras here, it's presented in standard
definition rather than HD) and basically looks the same as the DVD, which isn't
a bad thing. Colors are stable, and the transfer is very clean and blemish-free
for the most part. Detail is not always the sharpest and is drowned out a bit
in darker scenes on occasion. The English language track is mono, and sounds
absolutely fine. (George
R. Reis)