Film Review
Fantômas, re-invented for the 1960s as a malignant green skinned alien
with a penchant for James Bond-like gadgetry, turns from super-villain to
souped-up tax collector in this third and final outing under the direction
of André Hunebelle.
Fantômas
(1964) and
Fantômas
se déchaîne (1965) had both been so successful (each
drew an audience in excess of four million) that a third film was an easy
sell, and so Jean Marais was once more persuaded to return in the dual role
of Fantômas / Fandor, with Louis de Funès providing comedy support
as the bungling idiot police chief Juve. It's an all too obvious attempt
to try and cash in on the success of similar movies - notably the early
James Bond films and
Pink Panther movies - but by now
the French cinema-going public had already grown tired of such half-baked
imitations.
Fantômas contre Scotland Yard garnered a respectable
audience of 3.6 million, but this was small beer compared with the 17.3 million
that de Funès had achieved with his previous film,
La Grand vadrouille
(1966).
After various campaigns of terror intended to wreak havoc on the civilised
world (Fu Manchu and Charles Aznavour were clearly his role models), Monsieur
Fantômas now appears to be a reformed character. There's only
so much fun you can have from stealing jewels and threatening to take over
the world with weapons of mass destruction, so our cute little alien friend
decides to have a dalliance with progressive taxation - foisting a right-to-live
tax on the super-duper-rich. Fantômas really
is moving
into virgin territory here - in the entire history of humankind, there has
never been a government that would attempt such a drastic thing as getting
the mega-affluent to pay their fair share of tax. But Fantômas
is no ordinary being. He doesn't have to face the wrath of the electorate,
corporate lobbies or nonplussed media magnates. If he wants to tax
the richest people on Earth he can do it - and there's no one who can stop
him! Not even Inspector Juve.
Least of all Inspector Juve...
So Fantômas is now well and truly the good guy. Talk about image
makeover. In Pierre Souvestre and Marcel Allain's original stories
(and Louis Feuillade's subsequent
film adaptations)
Fantômas was an elusive ghoul who delighted in murder and mayhem, the
kind who would casually fillet his own grandmother if he knew he could get
a few centimes for her withered bones. Now, in Hunebelle's
Fantômas
films, which were admittedly made in the morally confused 1960s, he is suddenly
a hero. We don't just like him - we actually cheer every time he scores a
victory over that nauseating do-gooder Fandor and the utterly inept Inspector
Juve. Is there any other series of film in which the central criminal
protagonist
always gets the last laugh, whilst the supposed champions
of virtue and justice get resoundingly humiliated?
Could this possibly be a reflection of the anti-establishment mood that was
bubbling up in France in the '60s? Juve and Fandor may be on the side
of the angels but they are establishment figures, to be mocked rather than
sympathised with. When you've grown sick of their sort telling you
what to do and what to think inevitably you end up siding with mavericks,
drop-outs and outcasts like Fantômas. And who wouldn't?
Yes, his skin tone is a bit on the verdant side, and his habit
of killing people is a tad anti-social, but just look at his dress
sense - he has more style and sex appeal than James Bond, Jason King and
Emma Peel combined. Austin Powers probably has posters of him plastered
all over his groovy bachelor pad.
Fantômas in Scotland? There has be a Loch Ness Monster gag in
there somewhere? But no, not so much as a whiff of one (just an off-the-cuff
'we won't go there' comment). It is the film's cruellest omission and
a sign perhaps that the well of inspiration has well and truly dried up.
Fantômas as a latterday Robin Hood - that
is a nice idea.
But Juve chasing after men with white sheets over their heads, having a conversation
with a horse and being driven about on a motorised bed? Mistress subtlety
appears to have walked out on this one. Without de Funès's extraordinary
flair for improvisational comedy
Fantômas contre Scotland Yard
would have been a grimly unhumourous affair, unlikely to raise a titter from
even an easily pleased ten-year-old. If the scripted gags are awful
the plot is risible - it feels like it was thrown together in five minutes
without any thought. It's just a silly infantile run-around that is
basically just an excuse for our friendly neighbourhood shape-shifter to
humiliate Juve and Fandor over and over and over again.
And then there is the on-set rivalry. By this stage, Louis de Funès
and Jean Marais had grown to hate each other so much that they could hardly
stand to appear in the same scene, which explains why they are kept apart
for so much of the film (not an easy task when Marais is supposed to be playing
both de Funès's opponent and his ally). This mutual antagonism
comes through in both of their performances - de Funès appears tense
and lacks the spontaneity that he brought to his other film comedies; Marais
looks totally unenthused and it is now painfully evident that he is just
too old for the part of the romantic action hero. A more capable director
might have been able to capitalise on the obvious tension between the two
lead actors, but Hunebelle just seems to muddle through, as he did on all
of his films, showing no real verve or commitment. Mylène Demongeot
ends up as no more than a pretty adornment to Marais's inflated ego and it's
tragic to see an actor as capable as Henri Serre (one of the leads in François
Truffaut's
Jules et Jim,
made just five years previously) now reduced to an insignficant supporting
role in such a lowbrow crowdpleaser.
Its script shortcomings notwithstanding,
Fantômas contre Scotland
Yard still manages to be an enjoyable romp - arguably, it is the most
entertaining of the three
Fantômas films, despite its unabashed
silliness. What saves it (in addition to de Funès's comic genius)
is its slick production design, which has that eccentric, garish look which
was common to most spy/fantasy films and television series of the era, admirably
complemented by a suitably lush score from the great Michel Magne.
André Hunebelle's
Fantômas films hardly rate as comedy
classics but they have that unmistakable sense of '60s kitsch cool
and they're every bit as classy as the Bond films and
The Avengers episodes
that were made in this, the coolest of decades.
In the middle of the film there is a beautifully shot sequence - a fox hunt that
suddenly turns into a horseback abduction, with Fantômas's henchman arrayed
in their trademark black cagoules (a pleasing nod to Feuillade's films).
This is completely superfluous to the plot, clearly it is intended just to
pad the film out by another twenty minutes, but it provides a desperately
needed shot of momentum after the film's unbearably static first third.
Hunebelle only really came into his own when he was directing pacey swashbucklers
-
Cadet Rousselle (1954),
Le Bossu (1959) and
Le Capitan (1960) are all better
examples of his work - so it's no surprise that the parts of his
Fantômas
films that hold up best today are the action sequences. Marais did
the stunts; de Funès did the gags. And never the twain did meet.
© James Travers 2016
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Next André Hunebelle film:
Millionnaires d'un jour (1949)