SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away the film’s ending.
Contains moderate bloody medical horror and violence.
A plastic surgeon becomes obsessed with trying to restore his daughter’s face after a car accident leaves her disfigured. It’s a deadly mission, involving disturbing and experimental methods.
Georges Franju’s chilling horror is a nightmarish, yet lyrical, fable of identity, guilt and obsession, in which visceral frights blend with atmospheric cinematography. This unforgettable classic has influenced countless filmmakers, from John Carpenter to Pedro Almodóvar.
bfi.org.uk
The deathly hinterlands of ‘Eyes without a Face’
Over sixty years on, one of the chilliest things about Georges Franju’s landmark of surgical horror, Eyes without a Face, is its setting in colourless hinterlands on the edge of Paris.
Few opening shots set the tone for a film more perfectly than those of Georges Franju’s Eyes without a Face. The viewer first follows a dark road littered with trees stripped of their leaves by winter. The scene is from the perspective of the window of a Citroën 2CV. The road is part country, part urban, but with no one else in sight. It’s a hopeless landscape that Franju opens with, but also an unsettling one.
In only his second feature, following La Tête contre les murs (1959) and a succession of eye-grabbing shorts, Franju perfectly conveyed the nihilistic atmosphere still pent up in France after the years of the Second World War. Unlike his energetic contemporaries of the unfolding French New Wave, the director sought colder brutalities. In Eyes without a Face we’re far from the sunny boulevards of Jean-Luc Godard’s Breathless (1960) or Agnès Varda’s Cléo from 5 to 7 (1962). It tended to be in crime fiction and cinema, such as Franju’s, that the repressed traumas of a country still coming to terms with the occupation seemed to manifest, particularly through their unforgiving settings.
Eyes without a Face tells an unnerving tale of gothic melodrama. Dr Génessier (Pierre Brasseur) is a noted practitioner in skin grafts who lives in a large mansion just outside of Paris. In the opening scenes, he is sent for by the police. A corpse has been fished out of the Seine, which he identifies as the body of his daughter, Christiane (Edith Scobb). He is, however, lying. Instead, his daughter lives in isolation in his mansion, forced to wear a mask to hide the horrific injuries she received in a car accident. In the daytime, Génessier sends out his assistant Louise (Alida Valli) in search of prospective women to kidnap in order to steal their faces in the hope of grafting a new one for his daughter. But how long will the deception last before their macabre scheme comes undone?
Franju’s film is often coupled with Henri-Georges Clouzot’s Les Diaboliques (1955), as thrillers that helped rejuvenate France’s darker cinema with their unforgiving narratives and stark, deathly settings. The pair share their mixture of crime and horror thanks to the scriptwriting of Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac, the crime writers whose work also formed the basis for Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958). In this case, however, the duo were adapting Jean Redon’s novel rather than their own.
More so than in Clouzot’s film, Franju’s has a sense of a bourgeois society that simply cannot accept the horror of its past and will hurt others in order to – quite literally in this case – save face. Still, the trauma underneath cannot but reject this attempt at concealment, and the veneer of the stolen faces begins to degrade and bruise.
Even if still effectively within reach of the capital, the home of Génessier feels distinctly isolated and far from Paris. The city is portrayed as cold and indifferent when seen in its brief scenes, largely because it’s watched through the eyes of either the doctor or his assistant, both there to enact their plan. Although Louise ventures there on the prowl in search of the right face to steal, the journey back from the city to Génessier’s house is distinct in the film, separated from normal life like a bad memory shunned but regained. As one girl says nervously on the way to her death at the house: ‘It seems a very long way…’
The dead trees from the opening sequence litter the roads and look more like contorted bodies than bark. There’s a darkness that seems to fall when just a few minutes out of the capital’s streets. As in the novels of Georges Simenon and Léo Malet, a sense of journeying to the outskirts is essential in creating tension. That the mansion sits in a dark forest away from the bright lights of the city is a norm in French cinema, which regularly situates crime and misdeeds as festering in forgotten houses and roads, from the grim house at the heart of Alain Corneau’s Série noire (1979) to the out-of-town barn where unseen horrors occur in Claire Denis’ Bastards (2013).
If the brittle, frosty realms of outer Paris are a common setting for the darker end of French film, then Franju’s is certainly one of their most macabre, horrific depictions. Perhaps it’s due to the director’s straight rendering of the narrative, far from the fantastical aspects of similar horror stories. The desperation – not to say the humanity – of the characters makes the film (and its occasional gory set-pieces) deeply disturbing, and the isolation of the mansion house is absolutely essential in concealing these horrors from society.
In the final scene, after much turmoil has occurred and several characters have met a particularly grim fate, Christiane walks dreamily into the gloom of the forest, surrounded by doves taking flight like ghosts of her lost freedom. How revealing that even she, whose trauma spread like a disease all around her, feels the need to walk away from this cold, deathly place as night falls.
Adam Scovell, bfi.org.uk, 5 February 2020
EYES WITHOUT A FACE (LES YEUX SANS VISAGE)
Director: Georges Franju
Production Companies: Champs-Elysées Productions, Lux Film (Rome)
Producer: Jules Borkon
Production Manager: Pierre Laurent
Unit Production Manager: Margot Capelier
1st Assistant Director: Claude Sautet
Script Girl: Ginette Diamant-Berger
Adaptation: Pierre Boileau, Thomas Narcejac, Jean Redon, Claude Sautet
Dialogue: Pierre Gascar
Original Novel: Jean Redon
Director of Photography: Eugen Shuftan
Cameraman: Robert Schneider
1st Assistant Operator: Pierre Brard
Stills Photography: Jean-Louis Castelli
Special Effects: Henri Assola
Editor: Gilbert Natot
Assistant Editor: Denise Natot
Art Director: Auguste Capelier
Assistant Art Directors: Jacques Mély,
Claude Moesching
Set Decorator: Robert Volper
Gowns: Marie-Martine
Make-up: Georges Klein
Hairstyles: Marcelle Testard
Opticals: Lax
Music Composed/Orchestra Directed by: Maurice Jarre
Sound: Antoine Archimbaud
Animals: Marcel LeSourd
Cast
Pierre Brasseur (Dr Génessier)
Alida Valli (Louise)
Juliette Mayniel (Edna Gruberg)
Alexandre Rignault (Inspector Parot)
Béatrice Altariba (Paulette Merodon)
Charles Blavette (kennel employee)
Claude Brasseur (police inspector)
Michel Etcheverry (Dr Lherminier)
Yvette Etiévent (mother of sick child)
René Génin (Henri Tessot)
Lucien Hubert (2nd man at cemetery)
Marcel Pérès (1st man at cemetery)
François Guerin (Dr Jacques Vernon)
Édith Scob (Christiane Génessier)
Birgitta Juslin (Juliette) *
Gabrielle Doulcet (Dr Génessier’s admirer) *
France/Italy 1960
90 mins
Digital
* Uncredited
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