The use of gore in a movie is generally meant as a gag to
horrify, excite, or produce uncomfortable laughter, but rarely is it used to
help convey emotion in a way that might make viewers have to pass around the
tissue box. This is the case for Jean Rollin’s
The Living Dead Girl, which, in
addition to being Rollin’s goriest
film, happens to be the most tragic; with a wave of emotion accompanying
a blood splatter finale that’s become known for generating its fair share of
teary eyed viewers. The film’s powerful aftereffect does owe a great deal to
the all-or-nothing performance of its lead lady, Françoise Blanchard, but everything else, like the cinematography,
the story, and the realistic gore FX by Benoît
Lestang, come together to create a grand theatrical payoff that is made all
the better for seguing into a quiet ending credit sequence.
With the central plot, Rollin carries over a characteristic theme
he’s used frequently in his other films: two inseparable female companions
who are like kindred souls with a sisterly connection. Sometimes they are
lovers, twins, or, in this case, childhood friends with a bond made in blood,
and the main emphasis is the tenderness and strength of this connection. With The Living Dead Girl, Rollin fantasizes about what would
happen if death were to come between this unbreakable bond between the lead
characters, Catherine (Blanchard) and
Helene (Marina Pierro). There becomes
this obsession with preserving the past that ends up being unhealthy and spiritually debilitating for all involved, as it seems more and more hopeless for Catherine to continue on the
way she is; her hunger for blood causes her to suffer, and she comes to the realization that she is evil
and regrets being a living dead girl. The conditions needed to satiate
Catherine’s hunger ultimately corrupt Helene.