
London, UK. ARROW is excited to announce the February 2023 lineup of their VOD Website. Which is available to audiences in the US, Canada, the UK and Ireland.
The February 2023 lineup leads with the ARROW release of Dima Ballin & Kat Ellinger‘s film. Orchestrator of Storms: The Fantastique World Of Jean Rollin, available February 14 in the US, Canada, UK and Ireland.
Has there been a genre artist more fundamentally misunderstood and inappropriately discussed than Jean Rollin? He remains one of genre cinema’s most singular poets, a theatrical fantasist, interpreter of dreams, orchestrator of storms. His recurring use of twin or paired protagonists and surrealistic interpretations of vampirism. With tones that were often in the midnight space between gothic literature and fairy tale. His sense of humor and intellectual musings, his sumptuous visual ideas. Coming together to make inspired works of genre art that run against nearly all traditions.
Orchestrator of Storms: The Fantastique World Of Jean Rollin had its World Premiere at the Fantasia International Film Festival. And went on to make its international bow at FrightFest.
Watch Official Trailer for Orchestrator of Storms: The Fantastique World Of Jean Rollin
Orchestrator of Storms: The Fantastique World of Jean Rollin tells the story of one of Eurocult cinema’s most singular voices. Deeply misunderstood and widely misrepresented, during his decades-long career as a film director (1958-2009). Rollin’s work received absolutely no recognition in his native country of France, and was completely unknown anywhere else. In the nineties, because of home video, Rollin attained a marginal cult status in niche English speaking genre circles. Otherwise he has remained completely obscure.
Rollin was raised within the bosom of some of France’s most influential and intellectual elites. Thanks to his mother Denise’s friendship with figures such as Maurice Blanchot, George Bataille, Jean Cocteau. As well as Jacques and Pierre Prévert. His father was a director in avantgarde theatre, exposing Jean to some of France’s most interesting aspects of culture. It’s not surprising that when it came to making his films, he’s were unlike anything else on the scene.







