Film Review
Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre's iconic master criminal Fantômas
has undergone several transformations in the course of his long cinematic
career - from the sinister shape-shifting sadist in Louis
Feuillade's series
of silent masterpieces (1913-14) to the sarcastic green-skinned alien
inflicted on audiences in the
mid-1960s by André
Hunebelle. Between these - the two most enduring of Fantômas's
screen outings - another three films were made in France featuring the ruthless
arch-criminal, all pretty respectable thrillers in their own right, but none
doing full justice to the legendary Allain-Souvestre creation.
Paul Fejos's
Fantômas (1932)
and Jean Sacha's
Fantômas (1947)
were both valiant attempts to pluck the iconic criminal out of his original
Belle Époque surroundings and plant him in the modern age, in a similar
vein to
Universal's contemporary revamp
of the Sherlock Holmes stories in the 1940s. In both of these films,
Fantômas appropriates the fruits of modern technology (aeroplanes,
silencer-fitted guns, death rays) to support him in his nefarious and murderous
exploits. In the arch-criminal's next film,
Fantômas contre
Fantômas, it is from the recently defeated Nazis that his writers
draw their inspiration - specifically the highly immoral trepanning experiments
that were widely conducted by Nazi scientists in concentration camps during
the Second World War.
The nightmarish notion that a person's identity and behaviour can be radically
altered by drilling a hole in his skull is a chilling one, and this would
seem to be a subject better suited for a full-on modern horror film than
a mainstream French thriller of the 1940s.
Fantômas contre
Fantômas contains many scenes of a genuinely horrific - even sadistic
- nature, prefiguring (and sometimes surpassing) what Georges Franju would
later inflict on his audiences with
Les Yeux sans visages (1960).
In a sinister underground laboratory, a terrified victim cries out in vain
as a crowd of mask-wearing surgeons close in on him and pin him to the operating
table. Later, a man falls into a vat of acid with a blood-curdling
death scream - the awful impact of what we witness amplified by the matter-of-fact
way in which it is shot.
Then there is the film's most frightening sequence, in which the archetypal
mad scientist goes completely berserk and releases an army of zombie psychopaths
from their caged cells, howling at them to kill Fantômas - it is so
chillingly reminiscent of
Universal's horror
classics of the 1930s. Then there is Fantômas himself, appearing
in two guises, first as the impostor Bréval, played with terrifying
gusto by Aimé Clariond, and then as the demonic arch-criminal himself,
with Maurice Teynac positively revelling in the role. Here we have
two contrasting faces of pure evil - the disillusioned surgeon driven to
an insane plan of revenge, becoming increasingly unhinged as the film progresses,
and the calculating, pathologically sadistic crime lord whose sole aim in
life is to reap as much human misery as possible.
It is hard not to sympathise with Clariond's indignant scientist after his
cruel rejection by Marcelle Chantal at the start of the film, but this sympathy
is well and truly gone by the time he starts drilling holes in people's heads
and begins building up a private collection of zombie murderers. As
the pukka Fantômas, Maurice Teynac has less of a physical presence
than the scenery-chewing Clariond, but his resonant voice and manic laugh
never fail to send a shiver down the spine, making his the only screen version
of the character since Feuillade to have something of the superhuman quality
of the Allain and Souvestre creation.
Teynac is arguably the most accomplished screen actor to have taken on the
role of Fantômas. Prior to this, he had distinguished himself
in a raft of prestigious dramas that included Sacha Guitry's
Le Destin fabuleux
de Désirée Clary (1942) and
Le Comédien (1948); subsequently,
he would famously play Sherlock Holmes for a French radio series in the late
1950s. Two strong central villains calls for an equally strong pair
of crime-fighting heroes, and here the film doesn't disappointment, with
Alexandre Rignault skilfully reprising the role of Juve that he had recently
played in Sacha's 1947
Fantômas film, and Yves Furet assuming
the role of Fandor with a classic
Boy's Own adventure lust and an
evident enthusiasm for daring action stunts.
Fantômas contre Fantômas was one of director Robert Vernay's
most successful forays into mainstream genre cinema. After starting
out as an assistant to Julien Duvivier on such classics as
Maria Chapdelaine (1934) and
La Bandera (1935), he went on to
direct a series of impressive literary adaptations in the early-to-mid 1940s
that included
Le Comte de
Monte-Cristo (1943) and
Le
Père Goriot (1945). By the late '40s. Vernay was past
his prime, and found himself dealing with more mundane fare, such as the
lacklustre Fernandel comedy
Émile
l'Africain (1948).
With his one and only
Fantômas offering, Vernay shows himself
to be surprisingly adept as an action-thriller director. His flair
for strong visuals (so much in evidence in his early work) is apparent in
every reel of
Fantômas contre Fantômas, his inspired use
of noir-like lighting and camerawork bringing a creepy lurking menace and
unbearable tension to some of the film's more memorably frightening sequences.
Whilst it may not be quite in the same league of Feuillade's unsurpassed
Fantômas series, Vernay's surprisingly nasty little shocker
comes a close second and must surely rate as one of the most disturbing films
to have been made in France in the 1940s. It is certainly the one that
is most brazenly impacted by the horrors of the Nazi holocaust.
© James Travers 2022
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Robert Vernay film:
Andalousie (1951)
Film Synopsis
Brutally rejected by his one true love Irène de Charras, the renowned
surgeon François de Bréval commits suicide by crashing his
car into a tree at high speed. Not long afterwards, Paris becomes the
victim of a terrifying crime wave. Huge sums of money are extorted
from various businesses across the capital and several brutal killings are
reported in the newspapers. The public can draw only one conclusion:
this is the work of the feared master-criminal Fantômas!
Thought to have been killed after his last criminal exploit, the arch-fiend
appears to be back in business, using some form of trepan surgery to convert
ordinary people into deadly killing machines. As the police investigation
stalls, Inspector Juve is forced to ally himself with the city's black marketeers
in a bold plan to thwart his cunning adversary. With the help of the
adventure-loving journalist Fandor, Juve uncovers a secret laboratory beneath
a sprawling country chateau. It is here that the brain operations are
being performed - by none other than Bréval himself! It seems
that the surgeon is still very much alive. Having faked his own death,
he is now committed to a campaign of revenge to make up for the slights he
has suffered in his professional and personal life.
Juve is not the only one to have an interest in Bréval's criminal
activities. The real Fantômas is still at large, furious that
someone has had the audacity to carry out criminal acts under his name.
Rather than kill the surgeon, however, he decides to exploit his talents
for his own evil ends. Bréval has no choice put to create an
army of homicidal zombies which Fantômas will unleash on Paris if the
French government does not agree to his terms. Time is fast running
out for Juve and Fandor if they are to thwart France's public enemy number
one and prevent a massacre in the French capital...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.