Georges Franju Movies
First known for making disturbing documentaries that freely intermingled stark realism with a surrealistic edge,
Georges Franju went on to use similar techniques for several haunting feature films. Co-founding the world-renowned Cinématheque Française with
Henri Langlois provided
Franju with his second claim to fame.
Before entering French cinema,
Franju worked for an insurance company and in a noodle factory before doing a military stint in Algeria. Discharged in 1932,
Franju studied to become a set designer and later created backdrops for music halls such as the Casino de Paris and the Folles Bergére. Two years later, he teamed up with
Henri Langlois to make Le Metro, a short 16 mm film. He also created a short-lived film magazine and in 1935, using 500 francs borrowed from Langlois' parents, created a film club, Le Cercle du Cinéma, where the two showed silent movies from their private collection. From this club,
Franju and Langlois founded the Cinématheque Française in 1937. In 1938,
Franju became the executive secretary of the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF), a post he held through WWII. In 1945,
Franju was appointed secretary of
Jean Painleve's Institut de Cinematographie Scientifique.
In 1949,
Franju began the series of nine documentary films for which he became internationally famous. From the beginning, the novice director rejected the notion of objectivity in making documentaries. To
Franju, a documentary was personal and reflected the views of its maker. Even the most innocent-seeming of
Franju's subsequent works would have underlying themes of social protest or outrage, tempered with the filmmakers innate sense of poetry. The Nazi occupation of Paris and the hasty build-up of industrialism following the war would profoundly affect
Franju's early works. His first documentary,
Le Sang des Bêtes (
The Blood of Beasts) (1949), painted a horrific picture of daily business inside a Paris slaughterhouse. Heavily influenced by German expressionism, but simultaneously brutally realistic, the work contained some of the most disturbing scenes of animal cruelty on film and yet, paradoxically tempered them with a certain compassion and grace thereby creating a form unique to French cinema. Some critics have pointed out that the scenes of animals moving in lines towards certain death were subtle references to the Nazi death camps. Indeed, though
Franju's early works are hailed as precursors of the Nouvelle Vague movement of the late '40s and '50s,
Franju himself avoided labeling his work. His third film,
Hôtel des Invalides (1952), examined life inside an infamous national veterans hospital. Commissioned by the French government to pay tribute to the hospital and the War Museum, the film is considered
Franju's most subtle and powerful indictment against the glorification of militarism, a feat he accomplished by alternating scenes of proud warrior's icons and monuments with heart-wrenching sequences of actual survivors in all their grim disfigurement and ruin.
Franju later called it the favorite of his three "slaughter" films, the second of which was another government commissioned film,
En Passant par la Lorraine (Passing By the Lorraine) (1950). This was supposed to be a celebration of Monnet's plan to modernize French industry, but in
Franju's hands it became a look at the ugliness spewing forth from monstrous factories. His subsequent documentaries, especially the commissioned ones, while perhaps not as shocking, were just as subversive. Several of these films contained dramatized sequences as exemplified in
Mon Chien (
My Dog) (1955), a look at the grim fate of abandoned dogs in Paris.
Beginning with
La Tete Contre les Murs (
The Keepers) (1958),
Franju turned toward fully fictional films. Unlike his documentaries, which were forums for
Franju's angry world views, these movies both stylistically and thematically were loving tributes to his favorite filmmakers of the past. His lyrical horror film
Les Yeux sans Visage (Eyes Without a Face: The Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus) (1960), the tale of a surgeon who madly tries to repair his daughter's wreck-ruined face by grafting on to it the facial parts of beautiful women, most of whom, he leaves alive and terribly scarred, was an ode to German expressionism.
Judex (1963) honored the silent serials of pioneer filmmaker
Louis Feuillade while
Franju returned to poetic surrealism with his adaptation of
Jean Cocteau's Thomas the Impostor. In the subsequent years his film work was less frequent, though he did occasionally direct for television. In the late '70s he retired from filmmaking to preside over the Cinématheque Française. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

- 2004
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- Add Henri Langlois: The Phantom of the Cinematheque to Queue
Add Henri Langlois: The Phantom of the Cinematheque to top of Queue
Henri Langlois was, in many respects, the ultimate film fan. In 1936, at the age of 22, Langlois became (along with Jean Mitry and Georges Franju) one of the founders of the Cinémathèque Française, a theater and museum devoted to preserving the history of the motion picture. Initially a tiny operation financed by private funds, the Cinémathèque, with time, grew into Europe's most important film archive, collecting and preserving prints of rare films from all over the world and protecting many rare gems of the French cinema from destruction during the Nazi occupation of World War II. Langlois' enthusiasm for sharing the treasures of his collection with others helped spawn a film-crazy generation who created the French New Wave of the '50s, and in time, the French government acknowledged the importance of the Cinémathèque's work by financing their endeavors. In 1968, the French minister of culture, André Malraux, responded to Langlois' difficult personality and sloppy bookkeeping by pulling the government's financing of his projects, which led to an international outcry leading to the shutdown of the Cannes Film Festival by activists and film buffs. The Cinémathèque's funding and Langlois' leadership were later restored, and in 1973, his work in film preservation was honored with a special Academy Award. Henri Langlois: The Phantom of the Cinémathèque is a documentary which chronicles the life, times, and passions of the legendary archivist and includes interviews with his friends, contemporaries, and colleagues -- including Claude Berri, Claude Chabrol, Jack Valenti, and Daniel Cohn-Bendit. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Henri Alékan, Jo Amorin, (more)

- 1980
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Whether or not the title of this well-wrought film was intentional, this was indeed, the last melodrama made by director Georges Franju (1912-1987). The nostalgic story looks at the last days of a theatrical troupe as it travels around the French countryside performing in small towns in the 1950s. The old-style theater get mixed reactions from its audiences, yet the troupe manages to keep on going. But fate intervenes in their road schedule as they are finishing up in one village. They reject an aspiring actress, the wife of an innkeeper intent on leaving her husband, and the results are disastrous. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michel Vitold, Edith Scob, (more)

- 1978
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- 1974
- PG
When a master thief (Jacques Champreux) sets his sights on the centuries-old treasure of the Knights Templar, he must struggle to outwit the devoted keepers of the fortune. ~ Iotis Erlewine, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Gayle Hunnicutt, Jacques Champreux, (more)

- 1973
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The Man Without A Face is an archvillain, comic-book style, and in this French action movie, he proves to be a worthy foe. The villain has an extensive crime network, including a retreat under the streets of Paris. He has discovered that the Knights Templar, outlawed many hundreds of years before, still exist as a secret society, and that they have access to a hidden treasure of gold. He wants it, and it is up to the daughter of a murdered Templar and a few none-too competent policemen to prevent him from getting it. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- 1970
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A dedicated priest in frail health takes over a church attended by peasants who rejoice in the human love life has to offer them. Mouret (Francis Huster) is at odds with the wrathful rector (Andre Lacombe), who instills fear in the parishioners and takes exception to Mouret's embracing of the Virgin Mary. Mouret tries to mediate when the peasants fight over the belongings of a deceased woman. When he is taken ill and suffers short term memory loss, he is cared for at the house of his atheistic uncle and his servant girl. She cares for Mouret, who forgets his calling to God and falls for the young girl. She nurses him back to health and he returns to the church, but the rector drives the young girl from the parish and constantly reminds Mouret of his sin during his amnesia. When the young girl dies, Mouret buries her in consecrated ground despite the objections of the despotic rector. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Francis Huster, Gillian Hills, (more)

- 1965
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Thomas (Fabrice Rouleau) is a 16 year old who poses as the nephew of a general to help a princess (Emmanuella Riva) get to Paris during World War I. She helps wounded soldiers by taking them back to her castle for medical care. Thomas is able to cut through the red tape, and soon the princess' daughter (Sophie Dares) falls for the teen. Thomas is later caught behind enemy lines when he is moved with a military unit into the heat of battle. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Emmanuelle Riva, Fabrice Rouleau, (more)

- 1963
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The characters and plot convolutions of the classic silent French serial Judex are thrust into a 1960s framework in this Georges Franju concoction. Channing Pollock plays a mysterious masked avenger who kidnaps evil-banker Michel Vitold, then sets about to turn the banker's friends and loved ones against him. At first appearing to be as wicked as his captive, Pollock is actually motivated by familial love: his father had been driven to suicide by Vitold. Pollock is successful in destroying his enemy, adding spice to the program by wedding Vitold's daughter Edith Scob. In keeping with the spirit of the original serial, Pollock pops in and out of the plotline decked out in impenetrable disguises. As with his earlier horror film Eyes without a Face (1960), director Franju invests his two-dimensional material in Judex with three-dimensional characters. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Channing Pollock, Francine Bergé, (more)

- 1962
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Emmanelle Riva won a Best Actress Award at the Venice Film Festival for her portrayal of a tortured wife in this 1963 French-language adaptation of the novel by Francois Mauriac. Director Georges Franju remains faithful to the book. Riva plays the title character, who feels suffocated in her marriage to the upper-class twit Bernard Desqueyroux (Philippe Noiret). Theirs is a bland marriage in an isolated country mansion surrounded by servants. Therese tries to poison her husband with arsenic, but the dose isn't fatal. She is arrested, but Bernard refuses to press charges, instead bringing her home to a prison of his own devising. He locks her in a bedroom and allows her only cigarettes and wine. Much later, he frees her for a party, and their friends are shocked at her deterioration. ~ Michael Betzold, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Emmanuelle Riva, Philippe Noiret, (more)

- 1961
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Pleins Feux sur l'Assassin is a passable murder mystery by Georges Franju set in the atmospheric interior of an old chateau and involving the heirs to a fortune. The dying man whose fortune it is has played an unusual trick on those who would have his riches. He has hidden himself in a secret room inside the chateau, knowing that his body has to be found before the castle can be passed on as an inheritance. The would-be heirs are caught in a dilemma but decide to turn the venerable structure into a light-and-sound show extravaganza in order to attract tourist money. That is just fine, except a series of accidents among them soon begins to look like murder. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Pierre Brasseur, Pascale Audret, (more)

- 1960
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- Add Eyes Without a Face to Queue
Add Eyes Without a Face to top of Queue
French director Georges Franju's Eyes Without a Face (Les Yeux Sans Visage) is an unsettling, sometimes poetic horror film. Pierre Brasseur plays a brilliant plastic surgeon, Prof. Genessier, who has vowed to restore the face of his daughter, Christiane (Edith Scob), who was mutilated in an automobile accident. With the help of his assistant (Alida Valli), he kidnaps young women, surgically removes their facial features, and attempts to graft their beauty onto his daughter's hideous countenance. This naturally has an adverse effect on the "donors," some of whom commit suicide rather than go through life faceless. Franju's haunting, muted handling of basic horror material is what lifts Eyes Without a Face out of the ordinary and into the realm of near-classic. When the film failed to draw crowds under its original title, however, the distributors decided to exploit it as a two-bit "scare" flick with the new title The Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Pierre Brasseur, Alida Valli, (more)

- 1958
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- 1958
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La Tete Contre Les Muirs (U.S. title: The Keepers) was director Georges Franju's 2nd cinematic offering for 1958, and his first purely fictional film. Franju's prior training in documentaries helps to bring a veneer of reality to this harrowing glimpse within the walls of an insane asylum. Pierre Brasseur plays Marbeau, a traditionalist "head doctor" who takes on the case of young Francois (Jean-Paul Mocky). Though not really insane, Francois has been institutionalized for daring to defy his wealthy father. The story is told from Francois' point of view, as he teeters on the edge of madness during his involuntary internment. The film is essentially a plea for more sensible treatment of the mentally disturbed and the emotionally distressed, calling for much-needed widespread reforms -- something that, alas, was not readily forthcoming in the late 1950s. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Pierre Brasseur, Paul Meurisse, (more)

- 1957
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- 1956
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- 1956
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- 1955
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- 1953
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- 1953
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- 1952
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French filmmaker Georges Franju, director of Eyes Without a Face, Blood of the Beasts, and several other renowned classics, pays fond tribute to one of his forerunners in Le Grand Melies, a half-hour biography about early film director and innovator George Melies. Sequences from the director's life are re-created with the assistance of his family, with Melies' second wife appearing as herself and Melies' son Andre in the role of his father. The film details Melies' career, from his beginning as a stage magician to his fateful discovery of cinema at an exhibition by Lumiere. Inspired, Melies built his own film camera and set about revolutionizing the film industry with such groundbreaking works as Le Voyage dans la Lune (A Trip to the Moon). Considered the inventor of special effects, he was among the first to apply theatrical techniques, stage sets, and trick photography to film and exploit the medium's potential for fantasy. However, his business acumen was not equal to his artistic and technical skill; the film also shows how Melies soon found himself ruined by a proliferation of imitators. Franju ends his fond recollection with a personal tribute, acknowledging Melies' role in making his own films possible. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi
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- 1951
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- 1950
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- 1949
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This vivid depiction of a slaughterhouse is presented in French with English subtitles. ~ Rovi
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