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Les raisins de la mort

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(Redirected from The Grapes of Death)
Les raisins de la mort
Original Release Poster
Directed byJean Rollin
Written byJean-Pierre Bouyxou
Christian Meunier
Jean Rollin
Produced byChristian Ruh
StarringMarie-Georges Pascal
Félix Marten
Serge Marquand
Mirella Rancelot
Patrice Valota
Patricia Cartier
Michel Herval
Paul Bisciglia
Brigitte Lahaie
Olivier Rollin
Françoise Pascal
Evelyne Thomas
Jean-Pierre Bouyxou
Edited byChristian Stoianovich
Dominique Saintcyr
Music byPhilippe Bissmann
Release date
  • 5 July 1978 (1978-07-05)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Les raisins de la mort (English: The Grapes of Death, also known as Pesticide) is a 1978 French horror film directed by Jean Rollin. It centres on a young woman who becomes trapped in a village where a dangerous pesticide has turned the residents into aggressive zombies.[1]

Plot

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At the Roublès winemaking vineyard, the workers spray the fields with pesticides. When one of the workers becomes ill, complaining of a pain in his neck, his boss insists it's just a minor injury and tells him to go back to work.

Élizabeth is travelling by train to Roublès to live with Michel, her fiancé and the owner of the vineyard, and makes a friend with Brigitte, a woman on the train. Brigitte excuses herself to visit the restroom and doesn't return for a long time; then the vineyard worker comes aboard, encounters Brigitte, and a bit later joins Élizabeth in her compartment. In time, the man's neck suddenly grows an ulcer which starts oozing blood. Panicked, Élizabeth escapes him, stumbling upon Brigitte's corpse on the way.

Leaving the train, Élizabeth flees to a nearby village for help. A man named Pierre and his daughter Antoinette take her in, but react coldly to her tale. Élizabeth panics when she sees Pierre's arms disfigured by infection, but Antoinette holds her back, telling her to get upstairs to take a rest. When Élizabeth enters the bedroom and discovers a woman whose throat has been cut, Antoinette explains that the dead woman is her mother, and that her father killed her because he's become insane. Élizabeth and Antoinette try to leave the house, but Pierre, now featuring the same facial ulcers as the vineyard worker, catches them and rips open his daughter's blouse, revealing similar ulcers on her body. He kills Antoinette with a pitchfork, but Élizabeth flees and takes Pierre's car. When he gets in front of it and begs her to kill him, she runs him over and drives off.

Élizabeth travels further into the area to look for help and is approached by a man whose head is covered with ulcers and who is asking for help. When the pain from the infection makes him smash the car's window, the panicked Élizabeth shoots him with a revolver taken from the glove compartment. She comes across a blind girl named Lucie, who is searching for her caregiver, Lucas. While helping her, Élizabeth comes upon more bodies covered with the same strange ulcers strewn all over the village, while others are stumbling around like zombies, driven into murderous insanity by the infection. Élizabeth declines to tell Lucie, who runs off on her own and is killed and decapitated by Lucas, who has also been infected.

As the infected chase her, a blonde woman rescues Élizabeth. This woman has been trapped in a house for a few days, so she and Élizabeth try to get out and run, but the woman suddenly grabs Élizabeth and leaves her to the infected. Two men, Paul and Lucien, show up and start killing the infected. They encounter the blonde, who convinces them that she is not infected by briefly disrobing, and they tell her to wait by their truck. Escaping her assailants, Élizabeth reaches the truck, where she and the woman get into a fight. Élizabeth clubs her with a torch, revealing previously hidden infection boils on the woman's face. The woman then tosses the torch into an open dynamite crate on the truck, blowing the car up and killing her.

While Élizabeth, Paul and Lucien leave the village on foot, they begin to deduce that the infestation happened just after a wine festival on the Sunday before. Élizabeth suggests seeking out her fiancé for answers, and so the three proceed to the vineyard. Finding it apparently abandoned, Paul and Lucien sit down for a meal after learning from a phone call that the authorities are aware of the infection. Restless, Élizabeth searches the grounds and finds Michel, also infected but still lucid. He reveals that he invented the pesticide which tainted the wine that started this baleful infection, which spread so quickly because he had illegally employed immigrants as cheap labor, which prevented him from notifying the police.

Despite Michel's urgings that she stay away, Élizabeth embraces him. When Paul comes looking for her and discovers the two, Michel, unwilling to become insane, leaps at Paul, compelling the latter to shoot him. Now apparently infected herself, Élizabeth picks up Paul's gun and shoots him, then ambushes and kills Lucien when he comes looking for them. The film ends with Élizabeth allowing Michel's blood to drip on her face from the loft above.

Cast

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Home media

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Les raisins de la mort was first made available on DVD in the United States via Synapse Films on 25 April 2002; this special edition release preserved its original aspect ratio of 1.66:1. It was released again in the US, by Redemption Films, on 20 May 2008. Both releases of the film in the US were uncut. In the United Kingdom, the film was released on DVD by Redemption Films on 25 April 2005, also in its original aspect ratio of 1.66:1.

Redemption released the film for the first time on Blu-ray in the US and Canada on 25 April 2013.[2]

Other titles

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The Grapes of Death
Pestizide
Pesticide
The Raisins of Death
Foltermühle der gefangenen Frauen

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  • "Vampires and Virgins: The Films of Jean Rollin" episode of Eurotika!, a documentary television series directed by Andy Stark and Pete Tombs (1999)
  • La Nuit des horloges, directed by Jean Rollin (2007)
  • Secret Cinema, short film directed by Michael Wolf (2007)
  • Spark of Life, short film directed by Mike Bazanele (2008)

References

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  1. ^ "Classic Horror: The Grapes of Death". classic-horror.com. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  2. ^ "The Grapes of Death Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
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