In 1872, 25 years
before publication of Bram Stoker's Dracula, Irish author Joseph Sheridan Le
Fanu wrote a Gothic novella called Carmilla.
First appearing in the magazine, The Dark Blue, and then in a collection
of Le Fanu's short stories called In a Glass Darkly, Carmilla is the tale of a
female vampire preying upon young women in the state of Styria in southeastern
Austria.
Today, the title
character is widely considered the archetype of the lesbian vampire in popular
culture. Ever since its publication,
adaptations of Carmilla have regularly appeared on stage and screen. Of the movies I've seen (and am going to talk
about here), very few are faithful to the original story, but all
feature at least some characteristics of the original character.
Carmilla (1872) – The Novella
She used to place her pretty arms about my neck, draw me to her, and
laying her cheek to mine, murmur with her lips near my ear… And when she had
spoken such a rhapsody, she would press me more closely in her trembling
embrace, and her lips in soft kisses gently glow upon my cheek.
However, immediately
following this description, Laura explains that she does not necessarily
reciprocate these feelings; rather, she's held in some kind of power by
Carmilla:
…I used to wish to extricate myself; but my energies seemed to fail
me. Her murmured words sounded like a
lullaby in my ear, and soothed my resistance into a trance, from which I only
seemed to recover myself when she withdrew her arms.
Living with her widowed
father in a castle in Styria, 18-year old Laura is disappointed that General
Spielsdorf is no longer bringing his niece to visit (she died suddenly), but is
thrilled when a mysterious woman arranges to leave her daughter (Carmilla) in
their care after a carriage accident in front of their home. Laura and Carmilla grow close, but their
relationship is complicated by the feelings and actions related above.
Carmilla exhibits odd
behavior such as abrupt mood changes, sleeping during the day, sleepwalking at
night and reacting violently when a Christian hymn is sung. She's also the spitting image of a woman in a
portrait from 1698, "Mircalla, Countess Karnstein". En route to a deserted village called
"Karnstein", Laura and her father meet General Spielsdorf, who, in a
story within the story, relates how exactly his niece died.
It seems a mysterious
woman arranged to leave her daughter (Millarca) in his care while she attended to
urgent business. His niece soon became
mysteriously ill (with symptoms that Laura now possesses, by the way) and the
General was convinced she was the victim of
a vampire. One night, he hid in a
closet and watched a cat-like creature attack her. He leapt from the closet and the startled
creature turned into Millarca, who fled.
His niece then died.Vampyr (1932)
The first
feature-length movie officially based on the works of Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu
is the French-German film, Vampyr (1932), although the opening credits say it
is based on the entire collection, In a Glass Darkly, rather than simply
Carmilla. I find very little in Vampyr
that is similar to the plot of the original novella, so I assume key elements
came from other stories in the collection.
In this movie, the female vampire is not Carmilla (or any of its
anagrams) and there is no mention of any Karnsteins or the novella's lesbian
themes.
Vampyr is not a silent
movie; however, there is very little dialogue and most of its exposition is
revealed through title cards. Allan Gray
(Nicolas de Gunzburg) is introduced as a traveler with an interest in the
supernatural. While staying at an inn,
he wanders upon a castle where one of its inhabitants, a young woman named
Leone, appears to be the victim of a vampire.
Ultimately, the vampire is tracked to the grave of Marguerite Chopin,
where she is killed by driving a metal bar through her heart.
This is only a fraction
of the story in Vampyr. It is part of a
larger plot involving a mysterious doctor who is the movie's true villain. But neither story matters as much as the
style and atmosphere of Vampyr. The
movie is slow and sometimes doesn't seem to make sense, but offers some of the
most haunting imagery I've ever seen in a horror movie. For me, though, it peaks early and becomes a
little repetitive and tiresome by the end.
For its time, Vampyr is
incredibly inventive. For example, ghosts,
or what I assume are ghosts, are portrayed as shadows that rise from the ground
and move across the landscape. The scene
that sticks with me, though, is a dream or vision Allan Gray has of being
buried alive. I couldn’t tell you how or
why it fits into the story, but it's a classic.
Blood and Roses (1960)
The next movie based on
Carmilla (that I've seen) is Blood and Roses (1960). It introduces elements from the novella,
although the story structure is not the same.
Here, the family name is von Karnstein, but rather than the actual
vampire Millarca rising, it's her spirit that possesses her descendant,
Carmilla.
Carmilla (Elsa
Martinelli) is jealous of Georgia Monte Verdi (Annette Vadim) because she is
marrying her cousin, Leopoldo von Karnstein (Mel Ferrer), with whom she is in
love. When an accident in the family
cemetery unearths Millarca's grave, Carmilla in drawn to it. That's where the possession or transfer of
souls (or whatever you want to call it) takes place. Blood and Roses isn't as straightforward as
this brief synopsis makes it sound. In
fact, I'm not able to recount the details of the story for you without the
Internet Movie Database to assist.
Carmilla focuses her
attacks on Georgia, I assume because she believes that she can then be with
Leopoldo. Director Roger Vadim (And God
Created Woman) gives us a smoldering scene or two between the two women. The lesbian themes are there for the first
time; however, I don't believe Millarca (or Carmilla) are lesbians, because
they were/are both in love with men.
While there is
not exactly a story within a story like there is in the novella, there is a
detailed verbal recounting of the von Karnstein family history that's
similar. In 1765 (nearly 100 years later
than in the novella), the von Karnsteins were believed to be vampires. All but one, Millarca, were destroyed. She was saved by her cousin, Ludwig von
Karnstein, with whom she was in love.
When he was later unfaithful to her, each of his subsequent fiancées
died mysteriously before their weddings.
Missing from this history is what ultimately happened to Millarca. If she was a vampire, was she destroyed? How did she end up in a grave, her body
unable to rise, but her spirit ready to wander?
Blood and
Roses is one of those movies I feel like I should watch again, because I don't
understand why it is so highly regarded in the horror community. Vampyr, I understand; it's artful and
moody. But Blood and Roses has no such
aspirations; it just sordid to be sordid.To be continued...
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