VAMPYROS LESBOS (1970)
Label: Severin Films
Region Code: Region-Free
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 89 Minutes 17 Seconds
Audio: German DTS-HD 2.0 Mono with Optional English Subtitles
Video: Dolby Vision HDR10 2160p Ultra HD Widescreen (1.66:1), 1080p HD Widescreen (1.66:1)
Director: Jess Franco
Cast: Soledad Miranda, Paul Muller, Jess Franco, Dennis Price, Ewa Stromberg
Countess Nadine Carody (Soledad Miranda, Count Dracula) is a vampire who performs nightly at a local nightclub where she catches the eye of a cute young American tourist named Linda (Ewa Strömberg, She Killed In Ecstasy), who becomes obsessed with the blood-sucking stripper, plagued by erotic dreams of her nightly. No longer able to resist the attraction Linda seeks out Countess Nadine on her island home, despite warnings from a hotelier named Memmet (played by director Jess Franco), a crazed weirdo whom Linda discovers has a penchant for torturing and murdering young women in his home, which turns out to be connected in a way to the Countess.
Linda seeks out the Countess on her island home where she is told that the property once belonged to none other than the notorious blood-sucker Count Dracula and that the Countess is a direct descendant. Afterward the two enjoy a few glasses of wine, and as so often happens in the Franco films, the gorgeous women get naked and start fooling around with each other, with the Countess drinking blood from Linda's jugular. When the partially drained Linda awakens the next day she finds the Countess drowned in the swimming pool. Linda winds up at an asylum seeking treatment from Dr. Seward (Dennis Price, Nightmare Castle), apparently remembering nothing of the encounter with the Countess. The doc becomes suspicious when another patient turns up with visions of the Countes, but the film plays a bit with the idea that Linda's an unreliablenarrator, leaving open the option that the supernatural enchantress may have been a figment of her own damaged psyche.
At this point the film sort of goes off the rails and becomes a blur of Eurocult convolution and hallucinatory imagery. We have the Countess's servant Morpho (José Martínez Blanco, Pieces), Linda's boyfriend Omar (Andrés Monales, The Vengeance odmf Dr. Mabuse) and the creepy Memmet (dir. Franco) entering the picture for a confusing finale that pits Doc Seward against the sensual vampire, not to stake her through the heart as you might expect, but to become one of the undead. Cohesion is not the strongest point of this, or many, Franco entries, the story is a bit of a mess and only loosely held together with lurid imagery and some surreal atmosphere, which for a Franco film is par for the course, and this is one of the better ones.
Thankfully we have Franco again teaming-up with cinematographer Manuel Merino (99 Women) who fills the frame with sultry and surreal imagery, plus the magnetic beauty of Soledad Miranda, truly a vampyric vision of blood-draining sexiness, she with the supernaturally soulful wide-eyes and just the right amount of 70s curviness, her cult-status in not difficult to comprehend, she was a stunner. So, we have some eye-candy and surreal imagery, but the frosting on top of this erotic slice of weirdness is the groovy lounge score from Manfred Hübler (She Killed in Ecstasy) and Sigi Schwab. While it might not be a great slice of 70s cinema it's a fun Franco film with enough softcore delights so as not to disappoint the pervs, such as myself. Honestly I could see this being a hard watch for those not already steeped in Eurocult and the other works of Jess Franco, it's a bit slow and strangely paced in places, but for the Franco-philes this is prime stuff.
Audio/Video: Vampyros Lesbos makes it's 4K Ultra HD debut from Severin Films looking terrific, framed in 1.66:1 widescreen with Dolby Vision HDR10 enhancements in 2160p. The film is scanned in 4K from the original camera negative and the source looks fantastic, with pleasing depth and clarity, the 4K resolution offers plenty of texture and detail, and the WGC color-grade nicely plumps up primaries, with deep reds and inky blacks.
Audio chores are handled by a German DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono with optional English subtitles. The track is clean and audio levels are well-balanced, dialogue sounds fine but the highlight is the psychedelic lounge score from Manfred Hübler and Sigi Schwab, a cool pastiche of loungey grooviness and fuzzed-out electric guitars.
Onto the extras, we get a new pair of brand commentary tracks, first is an Audio Commentary with Kat Ellinger, author of Daughters of Darkness, and a second Audio Commentary with film professor Aaron AuBuchon and Oscarbate Film Collective's John Dickson and Will Morris. Both tracks are fantastic, and as someone who does not read a lot of film books I learned plenty about the cast and crew, the locations, loads of production notes, and explorations of the films themes, sexuality and influences.
Also new is the 45-min Fever Dracula – Interview with Stephen Thrower, Author of Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús, it just wouldnt be a proper Franco reissue without Thrower contributing! He gets into this being a pivotal film in Fraco's career, his style and atmosphere, the terrific camerawork, the plot-stripped moodiness of it, comparing and contrastingnit to Franco's Count Dracula, examining the imagery of the film in-depth and how it maps on the story, as well as the themes of homosexuality.
Also new to this edition is The Red Scarf Diaries – A Jess Franco career appreciation by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Sean Baker, how speaks passionately of he discovered Franco on his cinematic journey, his appreciation of his indie spirit, and a special apprectiatoon for the film's with Soledad Miranda, what makes her so memorable, and it's influence on his film Anora, calling Franco's style a timeless, beautiful timecapsule.
In The Land Of Franco Part 12, a new 19-min Franco locations featurette with Stephen Thrower, locations in Paris as seen in The Sadist of Notre Dame, Cecelia, Exorcism, Hot Nights of Linda, Blue Rita, and a sadly fruitless and exhaustive endeavor to find the cellar bar from Lorna... the Exorcist,
Archival extras begin with the 21-min Interlude In Lesbos – Interview with director Jess Franco, the now deceased auteur Jess Franco, sprawled out on the couch chain smoking while discussing the making of the film and his collaboration with producer Karl-Heinz Mannchen and his love for Soledad Miranda, and her tragic passing. Also included is the Interview with Soledad Miranda Historian Amy Brown which is also found on the She Killed in Ecstasy 4K Ultra HD. Disc extras are buttoned up with a 3-min German Trailer for the movie, 1-min Alternate German Opening Title Sequence – ‘Dracula’s Heiress’ and a short 3-min outtake from the Jess Franco interview, Jess is Yoda.
This 2-disc set does not include the bonus DVD disc that accompanied the previous Special Limited 2-Disc Collectors Editio from Severin, which offered the a 75-min
Las Vampiras – Alternate Spanish Language VHS Version with optional English subtitles, a version of the film that had had all the nudity removed per censorship of the era, it also features an alternate and inferior soundtrack, but it makes for a fun Franco-curio, even if it is ported from an ugly VHS source, so hang onto the edition for that, plus the 20-min Stephen Thrower on Vampyros Lesbos: Interview with Author of ‘Murderous Passions – The Delirious Cinema Of Jess Franco’, which is also not included.
The 2-disc set arrives in a black, dual-hubbed keepcase with artwork by Wes Benscoter, plus a slipcover featuring a separate artwork of Soledad Miranda.
Special Features:
- Fever Dracula – Interview with Stephen Thrower, Author of Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús (44:44)
- The Red Scarf Diaries – A Jess Franco career appreciation by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Sean Baker (9:54)
- Interlude In Lebos: Interview featurette with Director Jess Franco (20:51)
- Sublime Soledad: Interview with Soledad Miranda Historian Amy Brown (20;23)
- Jess Is Yoda Clip (2:44)
- Alternate German Opening Title Sequence – ‘Dracula’s Heiress’ (1:26)
- German Trailer (2:36)
Vampyros Lesbos (1970) is a hypnoticly erotic slice of Eurocult offering a dizzying blend of softcore vampire happenings and the usual Franco-weirdness. Star Soledad Miranda is absolutely stunning in 4K, and Severin have put together a wonderful UHD edition of the film with new and arvchival extras, making this a must-own have for the Franco-philes and Euro-cultists!
Buy it!
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