A Virgin Among the Living Dead – Jesús Franco, 1973

Virgin among the living dead (V.O. Une vierge chez les morts vivants)

France, 1973

Director: Jesús Franco

Genre: Horror

Plot

Christina (Christina von Blanc) is a young orphan who arrives at a castle in the countryside to meet her relatives and collect an inheritance. Her father has hanged himself shortly before. Both the manager of the boarding house where she has been staying in the nearby town and a teenager she meets in the vicinity tell her with astonishment that the castle she intends to go to has been abandoned for years.

The girl meets her relatives, bizarre characters. Her pianist uncle, her gloomy aunt, the voluptuous cousin Carmencé (Britt Nichols), another dying cousin, a mysterious blind woman… And a strange butler (autistic?) named Basilio (Jesús Franco); mute, unable to articulate coherent words, of alienated appearance.

During the film, dreamlike scenes of dreams within dreams follow one after the other, trapping the protagonist more and more in a suffocating nightmarish spiral. Many times Christina does not know if what she is living is real or if she is suffering from hallucinations influenced by the demented atmosphere.

Carmencé making cuts on the blind woman’s breasts and vampirically sucking her blood, inviting Christina to join her; the hanged father appears to her on multiple occasions, saying that “they”, the “relatives” are the ones who have killed him; zombie chases through the woods; the uncle playing the piano while Carmencé, half-naked and alcoholic, writhes to the rhythm of the music on the carpet to the delight of the bizarre Basilio…

The young woman begins to suspect that her macabre relatives are indeed “living dead”.

Commentary

Although the story is extremely confusing, the gloomy and surreal atmosphere is very well achieved; to which the excellent soundtrack that accompanies the scenes contributes. Director Jesús Franco participates as a supporting actor, although he doesn’t say a word because his character, a kind of lunatic servant, is mute (but not deaf), and instead of speaking he emits unintelligible gurgles.

It is useless to try to find logic in the plot. Simply put, the scenes follow one after the other as in a grotesque nightmare. In some aspects (such as, for example, the beauty of the actresses) it is reminiscent of Jean Rollin‘s filmography.

The zombies that appear are not very elaborately characterized (nothing to do with the drawing on the cover), and are closer in appearance to normal men behaving as if they were under the effect of a drug that has made them lose their minds and pushes them to behave like automatons. They are reminiscent of the locals affected by the epidemic of radioactive grapes in Jean Rollin’s film “Les Raisins de la Mort”, shot later.

In general this film seems to be very underrated, when in my opinion, it is a very successful film within its genre. Much more interesting and less tedious than “Al otro lado del espejo” (also by Jesús Franco), “Virgen entre los muertos vivientes” also has some touches of humor – although probably unintentional.

Obscene Mirror – Jesús Franco, 1973

On the other side of the mirror (V.O. Le miroir obscéne)

France, 1973

Director: Jesús Franco

Screenplay: Jesús Franco

Cast:

Emma Cohen (Anette), Robert Woods (Bill)

Plot

The young pianist Anette (Emma Cohen) is about to marry her fiancé. Shortly before the wedding, her sister commits suicide. The wedding is not only postponed, but also cancelled; Anette separates from her fiancé, leaves her father’s house and becomes independent, going to work in a jazz club, which also functions as a prostitution den. There she meets a colleague with whom she has lesbian relations (which are explicitly shown). At the same time she has a new suitor, who is a theater actor. One day, calling at home, she learns that her father has committed suicide by hanging himself. From that moment on, Anette begins to have hallucinations, hearing the voice of her dead sister speaking to her from a mirror and inciting her to commit crimes. She will also try to take her own life (by slitting her wrists in the bathtub), but is rescued in time.

Commentary

The extremely prolific Jess Franco directed more than 200 films throughout his career (under numerous pseudonyms to avoid saturating the film market). Among his works there are some productions of great interest and artistic quality (such as the adaptation of the Marquis de Sade’s “Justine”, with an exquisite Romina Power), but what abounds most are B or Z films (some of which are, however, extremely funny); and also unbearable bodrios (particularly, the films made in recent years). This film (whose original title is “Le Mirail Obscéne”) does not fall into any of these three categories. It is neither a marvel, nor a “trashy but entertaining” production, nor is it a piece of garbage. It is simply mediocre, boring and dispensable; at least the French version that I have seen, and that from what I have read is mutilated in some scenes. Overrated, despite its promising plot, it does not hook the viewer as for example the suspense of the master Chicho Ibáñez Serrador or many of the Italian gialli of those years.