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In 1949, Georges Franju directed his first film, a short documentary
entitled Blood of the Beasts. A rigorous, unflinching study of a slaughterhouse
shot through with echoes of both the Surrealists and the death camps, it is at once
hypnotically beautiful and close to unwatchable. A parade of animals are slaughtered and
rendered before the camera, yet there's nothing lurid about the film: Franju approaches
the shocking material with clinical detachment, forgoing easy jolts in favor of clear-eyed
contemplation. He respects both the animals and the butchers, framing them with crisp
precision and weaving these grisly images into overwhelming, lyrical montages. This is no
simple vegetarian tract.
If he'd never made another film, Franju would be remembered for his
debut. Blood of the Beasts ranks among the greatest films ever made. (He'd also
earn a footnote as co-founder, with Henri Langlois, of the Cinematheque Francaise, the
film archive that spawned the Nouvelle Vague.) That film's wholly original tone - its
unnerving calm in the face of pain - formed the basis of his long and peculiar career,
which peaked in 1959 with Eyes Without a Face, now re-released in a new print with
freshly translated subtitles.
At once prescient and nostalgic, Eyes Without a Face is a
modernist horror film infused with the spirit of the silent avant garde. Pierre Brasseur (Children
of Paradise) plays Professeur Genessier, a plastic surgeon wracked with guilt
over his role in a car accident that has left the face of his daughter Christiane (Edith
Scob) "an open wound." (It's strongly implied that his chic assistant, Louise
(Alida Valli), is in fact the wife he grievously injured years before.) An expert in
transplants with a cellar full of baying, injured hounds he experiments upon, he's
determined to restore Christiane's beauty, though it means stalking and murdering
beautiful young women in order to graft their faces onto his daughter's.
Even the greatest horror films tend to devolve into camp over time;
what is terrifying today is ludicrous tomorrow and the canny tricks that catch an audience
unaware quickly become routine. And that campiness provides an escape clause, a means of
keeping discomforting material at bay--laughing at the amateurish acting in Night
of the Living Dead makes it easier to face down the images of cannibal children
and heaps of burning bodies. The handful of films that haven't lost their power - Murnau's
Nosferatu,
Dreyer's Vampyr,
Bergman's Persona
- downplay histrionics in favor of creeping dread. (They're also not so much horror movies
as art films with supernatural leanings.) There's nothing to giggle at in Persona,
no silly accents or maniacal laughter; the uncanny sway of the dream images that open the
film, the claustrophobic pace and the brooding silences make it impossible to keep the
film at arm's length or shake it off, even years after seeing it.
Eyes Without a Face isn't campy; it's also not much fun. Its
echoes of Mengele and anxiety about medical advances are evocative but clumsy, stated
outright in long, plodding dialogue scenes that might profit from the arch theatricality
of James Whale's Frankenstein
films. There's nothing in these scenes - more than half the film's running time - to laugh
at, but there's also nothing engaging. They're bits of exposition to fight through on the
way to the scenes that led to the film's reputation.
In long passages without dialogue - the film's beginning, the
abductions and especially the horrific, liberating conclusion - the film looks back to the
sober horrors of Blood of the Beasts and leaps from the mundane to the nightmarish.
Here, Eugen Schüfftan's chiaroscuro cinematography, Maurice Jarre's jaunty waltzes,
Franju's mesmerizing rhythms and Antoine Archimbaud's sound effects coalesce to create a
matter-of-fact surrealism. In half these scenes, Louise methodically hunts for victims on
the streets of Paris or disposes of their corpses. (In her pearl necklace and smart black
gowns, this pretty, chipper ghoul could be Cocteau's Death on her way to a cocktail
party.)
The rest are haunted by Christiane's masked face. A porcelain doll's
head floating above huge silken robes, the mask is set in a grimly impassive frown with
only her eyes - huge, darting and always terrified - visible. It's a disquieting, ethereal
image--the film takes its name from it for good reason. Christiane is believed dead, so
she can contact no one, and the miracle her father wants to perform for her is less an act
of love than a means of further controlling her. She drifts through her father's mansion,
morose and begging for the release of death, occasionally wandering to the cellar to pet
the dogs her father tortures or to look in on whoever he's brought in to maim on her
behalf. It's a vision that haunts precisely because it's at once so directly evocative
(Franju makes her a doll, a mannequin, a caged bird) and so wide-ranging. As an essay on
scientific ethics, Eyes Without a Face is banal. As fodder for uneasy dreams, the
animal panic in Christiane's eyes is permanently scarring.