In 1973, David McGillivray of the
Monthly Film Bulletin reviewed a 79-minute dubbed version of the film. McGillivray described the film as a "disconcerting mixture of traditional horror and futuristic sci-fi effects-achieves at its best a quality that is more hallucinatory than erotic." "...a mad
fever dream as lysergic as you could hope...it takes place in a sort of alternative nocturnal world that resembles our own, but which is firmly rooted in dream-logic" — Jonathan Sisson, February 2017 :"
La Vampire Nue, as it was released in France, was the second feature film directed and written by artist Jean Rollin after
Le Viol Du Vampire. Both films received poor reviews upon their original release but quickly grew into cult classics as audiences celebrated Rollin's intensely moody interpretations of a vampire-ruled society." "One of Rollin's early, cruder efforts, this weird and sometimes wonderful film mixes bizarre fashions, clumsy action, beautiful locations, dream images, casual eroticism and, unusually, a strangely humane finale....Absurdly plotted, this is still somehow rather impressive, with a novel premise and leaving you somehow rooting for the vampires, no mean feat." —
empireonline.com, 2000 :"costume design is also striking, particularly the masked costumes and outfits worn by the Castel twins, in their Rollin film debut" — John Kirk, Blueprint: Review, 2024 "In the interest of truth in advertising, the movie should have been titled
The Vampire in the See-through Nightie." — Gregory J. Smalley, February 2012, 366 Weird Movies, 2024 ==Further reading==