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THE
IRON ROSE
Blu-ray. Redemption.
Number
three in Redemption’s Jean Rollin Blu-ray editions is La
Rose de Fer – The Iron Rose. After
several sexy, surreal vampire films, this was a more personal
movie for Rollin – a bizarre, essentially plotless study
of madness and the love of death that oozes with atmosphere and
striking visuals.
The film follows two thinly drawn characters – a girl (Francoise
Pascal) and a boy (Hugues Quester) as they meet at a wedding
and set up a date the next day. This eventually takes them to
a huge, ancient cemetery, where he convinces her to make out in
a tomb. But when they emerge, it’s night time, and they
cannot find their way out. As they wander around looking for the
exit, the girl becomes more and more fixated – possibly
possessed – by the spirit of the dead, and the boy becomes
increasingly aggressive and desperate.
While Rollin drops hints of sinister things to come early on –
the cemetery seems to have a resident vampire, who we see briefly,
and its fair share of sinister looking visitors, including Rollin
himself – the film quickly evolves into something very unique
– closer to the works of Alain Renais or Bunuel (his Exterminating
Angel also features people inexplicably trapped in a
location). The cemetery, in daytime a run down, atmospheric pace
of the dead, becomes a maze and possibly an alternative universe,
and it is the atmosphere more than any supernatural aspect that
I suspect possesses the girl. Apart from a quick fantasy trip
to Rollin’s favourite beach location (a chance to have Pascal
frolic naked in a film otherwise devoid of blatant nudity and
eroticism), the film never leaves this increasingly claustrophobic
location, and neither do its two leads.
Pascal
– almost painfully sexy – gives a remarkable performance.
Rollin’s films are not generally known for their acting,
but he undoubtedly had the ability to draw a melancholic sense
of necromanticism from his better actresses (he would do a similar
thing in The Living Dead Girl years later). Pascal
seems possessed by her character – her transition from terror
to acceptance to a strange joy being remarkable, as she moves
from peril to pleasure in a way that is intense and unnerving.
Her smile at the film’s finale is chilling.
If you need to convince people that Rollin deserves to be seen
in the same light as other European arthouse filmmakers of the
Sixties and Seventies, then this is probably the film to begin
with. As a horror film, it’s really a non-starter, but as
a work of art, it’s amongst the best you’ll see. Visually
stunning, atmospheric and unforgettable, this is a highlight of
Rollin’s filmography and of French cinema in general. Even
if his vampire films don’t appeal, I suggest you give this
a try – you won’t regret it.
The disc features a new interview with Pascal, which is fun and
informative, the original English titles (where the film is named
The Crystal Rose) and the usual Franco-Redemption
extras.
DAVID
FLINT
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