In a way, nothing in Jean Rollin’s The Grapes of Death
penetrates as much as the opening images of weary agricultural labourers trudging
through the vineyards, their heavy breathing prominent on the soundtrack (the
film’s feel for rural landscapes and textures makes the title’s evocation of
Steinbeck more apposite than one might expect – it’s also sometimes been
released under the far more prosaic title of Pesticide). One of the
labourers complains of feeling sick, his concerns brushed aside by the boss,
and from there it’s a short hop to Living Dead territory, with a young
woman, Elisabeth, jumping off a train to escape a murderously demented
passenger and thereafter wandering through a rugged landscape which appears challenging
enough even in its usual state, let alone when populated by zombies (although,
intriguingly, the contagion takes radically different forms, for example affecting
one conniving woman’s mind while leaving her body unmarked – in the film’s most
ultra-Rollinesque moment, she obligingly takes everything off to demonstrate). Even
when at its more conventional, the film has an intriguing sense of remove,
starting from the oddly under-populated train; an exchange about the
distinction between those who fought during the war for an unexamined notion of
patriotism and those who specifically opposed Fascism in all its forms hinting
at festering cracks that only needed slight prodding to split open (it’s
amusing that two of the primary characters avoid contagion because, being solidly
of the working class, they drink beer rather than wine). It all winds its way
to a suitably bleak, un-celebratory conclusion, seeming to portend a bleak
future for Elisabeth, perhaps for all. A minor mystery concerns whether the “Francois
Pascal” cited in the credits refers to Francoise Pascal of Rollin’s The Iron
Rose, even though she’s not in the film: at least one online site says that
it does, and that her scenes were cut, but I think I would have more faith in
Rollin’s spelling ability, if nothing else.