Grapes of Death

  • englanti The Raisins of Death (lisää)
Traileri

Juonikuvaukset(1)

Viini, tuo viisasten juoma, voi olla antava, runsas ja eloisakin, mutta myrkyllisistä viinirypäleistä tehdyn viinin jälkimakua voisi kutsua lähinnä hyökkääväksi ja jopa raa'aksi, sillä sitä juoneet muuttuvat verenhimoisiksi tappajiksi. Elizabeth pakenee henkensä edestä hullua murhamiestä ja päätyy pieneen kylään. Valitettavasti hän joutuu ojasta allikkoon ja järkytyksekseen huomaa myös paikallisten tempoilevan mielipuolisen tappamisen vallassa. Outo vitsaus leviää muuttaen ihmiset raivoaviksi hirviöiksi. Ja mitä enemmän viini virtaa, sitä enemmän myös veri virtaa... (Atlantic Film Fin.)

(lisää)

Arvostelut (3)

J*A*S*M 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti “What happened with those French yokels?” - “Too much booze.” This isn’t a quote from the film, I’ve made it up! :-D, but it could easily be. The Raisins of Death is a classic example of 1970s Eurohorror: great atmosphere, good gore, Southern European countryside, little villages, pretty awful actors and zero logic in the story and the actions of the characters. An example (not literal, unfortunately): Blind woman: “Tell me what it looks like here!” – Heroine: “There are some crags...” - Blind woman: “Aha, I know where we are”, and without any mistakes she tells the heroine how to get to a far away village. But the atmosphere and the pretty nasty infected deserves four stars. ()

JFL 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti Along with Jesús Franco, Jean Rollin is one of the most overrated directors in the area of trash movies. Some filmmakers are deservedly renowned for their ability to make formulaic sequences more interesting despite limited budgets or, as the case may be, to draw dramatic potential out of a weak story and construct a narrative on it. Conversely, Rollin proves to be a desperate dilettante who completely squanders any potential with his futile directing. This is extremely obvious in The Grapes of Death, which a more capable director could have turned into a devastatingly intense horror movie, but Rollin turns the strong screenplay into a formalistically dismal bit of naïveté. Somewhere inside the film, there is the potential for a unique, gloomy horror movie that would turn the concept of apocalyptic zombie flicks on its head. Whereas such movies set most of the action in interiors, which, as symbols of home, protect the characters against the evil coming from outside, this time the female protagonist walks through a spectral landscape of desolate French mountains with old stone farmhouses and dilapidated homes. The agoraphobic motif is then combined with claustrophobic paranoia in the second half of the film, when it becomes clear that the villages and buildings offer no escape from the infection that is spreading through the countryside. Like Romero’s The Crazies, from which this film is clearly derived, places of civilisation become scenes of the breakdown of civilisational rationality and community when infection robs people of reason. An amusing curiosity is the purely French motif of the spread of infection, which takes place here through infected grapes and the wine made from them, which puts beer drinkers in the role of saviours of the world and exterminators of the infected. Unfortunately, all of the film’s positive aspects and potential are nullified the amateurish treatment and non-dramatically realised sequences, as well as the overall lack of motivation and the half-baked nature of the whole thing. ()

Goldbeater 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti It is known that the French are a nation of winemakers. But what happens when this agricultural sector turns into an incubator for a weird contagion due to the use of pesticides? Jean Rollin presents a rather visually impressive demonstration of apocalyptic horror, in which the inhabitants of southern France turn into crazy monsters (apparently inspired by George A. Romero's The Crazies). After watching it you may think twice before drinking a bottle of wine, and decide to have a pint of beer instead. The shots of the depopulated South of France and the numerous ruins of abandoned houses have the right setting for a good atmospheric horror movie, however, it has a very sketchy storyline and the bafflingly illogical behaviour of all the characters is a problematic key sticking point. It's inadvisable to think too deeply about the actions of individual characters here, otherwise, it could irreversibly damage your experience. It's a real pity, they've tried hard to get the approval of horror fans, as it starts with a sufficiently interesting and spectacular horror sequence, which would give you proper nightmares with a better quality more pacy screenplay, and if the director gave better direction to the cast. ()