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Fantômas: In the Shadow of the Guillotine

Original title: Fantômas I: À l'ombre de la guillotine
  • 1913
  • Not Rated
  • 54m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
Fantômas: In the Shadow of the Guillotine (1913)
CrimeDrama

Inspector Juve is tasked to capture the infamous criminal genius Fantômas who, ruthless and particularly elusive, changes his appearance and holds Paris' high society in a crippling grasp.Inspector Juve is tasked to capture the infamous criminal genius Fantômas who, ruthless and particularly elusive, changes his appearance and holds Paris' high society in a crippling grasp.Inspector Juve is tasked to capture the infamous criminal genius Fantômas who, ruthless and particularly elusive, changes his appearance and holds Paris' high society in a crippling grasp.

  • Director
    • Louis Feuillade
  • Writers
    • Marcel Allain
    • Louis Feuillade
    • Pierre Souvestre
  • Stars
    • René Navarre
    • Edmund Breon
    • Georges Melchior
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Louis Feuillade
    • Writers
      • Marcel Allain
      • Louis Feuillade
      • Pierre Souvestre
    • Stars
      • René Navarre
      • Edmund Breon
      • Georges Melchior
    • 11User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos11

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    Top cast10

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    René Navarre
    René Navarre
    • Fantômas…
    Edmund Breon
    Edmund Breon
    • Inspector Juve
    • (as Edmond Bréon)
    Georges Melchior
    Georges Melchior
    • Jérôme Fandor, journaliste à 'La Capitale'
    Renée Carl
    Renée Carl
    • Lady Beltham, maîtresse de Fantômas
    Jane Faber
    Jane Faber
    • Princesse Danidoff
    André Volbert
    • L'acteur Valgrand
    • (as Volbert)
    Naudier
    • Le gardien Nibet
    Maillard
    • L'habilleur de Valgrand
    Yvette Andréyor
    Yvette Andréyor
    • Josephine
    André Luguet
    André Luguet
    • Dollon
    • Director
      • Louis Feuillade
    • Writers
      • Marcel Allain
      • Louis Feuillade
      • Pierre Souvestre
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.92.6K
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Nice Start to the Series

    Fantômas - À l'ombre de la guillotine (1913)

    *** (out of 4)

    The first of a five film series has Rene Vacarre playing Fantomas, the mastermind French thief who breaks into the hotel of a princess and steals some priceless jewelry. Inspector Jive (Edmund Breon) finally manages to catch Fantomas but he plans an escape hours before heading to the guillotine. FANTOMAS: IN THE SHADOW OF THE GUILLOTINE isn't a masterpiece by any stretch of the imagination but at just 54-minutes the thing is entertaining enough to make it worth viewing if you enjoy silent cinema. I think the one thing this picture shows is that during this era the American cinema was still miles ahead of the French and even when Feuillade was considered the country's greatest director at this time. As with many of his earlier pictures, the director usually tells the story in simple medium shots and he really doesn't use any noticeable editing to try and build up any suspense or drama. The director pretty much just tells the story without any real flair or style and while this might kill some films from this period, Feuillade at least keeps the story moving at a nice pace to where it never gets boring. The film is basically broken down into three sections. The first dealing with the hotel robbery, the second with Fantomas' arrest and the third his eventual escape. The first segment was actually the most entertaining as the sets were rather interesting to look at and we get a unique opening showing an elevator climbing several floors. The trick editing is obvious but this sequence still has a unique look to it. The third story has a very far-fetched idea to get Fantomas out of jail but it somewhat works in a cliffhanger-like fashion. Vacarre is wonderful in his role(s) as he's certainly photogenic and manages to make you believe he could actually pull all of this stuff off. I was also impressed with Breon even though he's featured a lot less.
    deickemeyer

    We may expect a continuance of the story

    A multiple-reel drama in which there are good situations and well handled. M. Navarre plays a dual role and does splendid work. Opposite him is the Gaumont's famous leading woman, Mme. Renee Carl; she justifies every expectation. The story is of a bold thief, of the gentleman sort, who commits a robbery. He has also committed a murder. After his arrest and conviction, the wife of the murdered man, in love with the thief, bribes the keepers of the latter to bring him to her home, a short distance from the prison. It is the night preceding his execution. The same evening, a famous actor gives a representation of the condemned man in his cell. The impersonator is decoyed to the house of the woman after the murderer has arrived. He is still in his convincing make-up. After the woman has drugged him, the jailers take him back to his cell. As he is being prepared for the execution, a detective discovers that the man still under the influence of the drug is not the murderer. The final curtain is to the effect that "Henceforth it is Juve (the detective) versus Fantomas." So we may expect a continuance of the story at a later time. The picture will interest. - The Moving Picture World, June 28, 1913
    6JoeytheBrit

    They Seek Him Here, They Seek Him There

    Fantomas is a kind of French Moriarty, an arch-criminal, leader of a huge rag-tag band of villains, who can evade arrest by two policemen holding each of his arms simply by shaking his wrists and knocking them both out. I ask you, what chance has an honest copper got? The film actually seems quite ambivalent about him at times, and you suspect there is a sneaking admiration for him on the filmmakers' part, despite his incredibly ruthless streak (in one episode he uncouples a train carriage and sends its passengers to their death so that they can't act as witnesses against a robbery he has committed on board; in another incredible sequence he leaves a fellow villain stranded inside a church bell to await certain death the next time it is rung).

    The story lines of this French pre-WWI serial are fairly simplistic and don't stand up to even cursory scrutiny but, as a time capsule from a bygone age, the films are fascinating. Louis Feuillade's style of direction is basic to say the least and, for such a renowned early name from French cinema, something of a disappointment. The camera never moves, and every shot appears purely functional and nothing more. Perhaps I'm missing something, or perhaps I'm expecting more than I should from a piece of work nearly one hundred years old, but his style makes things drag at times. The film only really comes alive when Feuillade takes his camera outside to capture scenes of both rural and urban France. The film makes as much use of letters as it does intertitles to drive the story on and, considering the hindrance of it being a silent film, it's a device that works quite well.

    Fantomas will only be of interest to the movie buff rather than the film fan. The art of storytelling has moved on – or, given the impression of advancement that gives, perhaps changed is a better word – and even the most patient of filmgoers will find that the pace drags at times. Nevertheless, given its place in film history, it's an important film that is worth checking out.

    And it's also worth watching just for the final get-out-of jail card played by the wily Fantomas…
    7springfieldrental

    The First Serial with a Cliffhanger Ending, And First Crime Serial

    Movie serials, consisting of multiple episodes with the same characters ending in cliffhangers, leaving viewers in suspense so they would gladly pay to see the next one, were becoming popular in the early 1910's. The first serial in cinema to some degree was Edison Studio's 1912 "What Happened To Mary." Although the serial consisted of 12 one-reelers, no chapter ended in a cliffhanger.

    France's Gaumont Studios gets the crown for producing the first serial with dangling suspenseful endings to each episode. Gaumont bought the rights to Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre's very popular crime books (32 books in all) "Fantomas," published beginning in 1911. The studio's director, Louis Feuillade ("A Roman Orgy--1911), was assigned to direct a five-part serial based on the criminal portrayed in the books. Each episode concluded either in suspense or unanswered questions of what would happen next.

    "Fantomas" is cinema's first crime serial portraying movie's first super-villain, a slick criminal as well as leader of a gang of masked thieves. The serial kicked off in May 1913, with the release of "In The Shadow of the Guillotine." That followed with "Juve vs. Fantomas" "The Murderous Corpse," "Fantomas vs. Fantomas," and lastly "The False Magistrate." The entire series totaled five hours and 30 minutes, with each episode was one hour to 90 minutes long. All are available for viewing.

    The work of Feuillade, as seen in his 1911's "A Roman Orgy," is fluid but not innovative. His camera sits filming a tableaux of exciting action, which doesn't linger too long on a sequence. The serials' pacing in editing also gives the episodes a rapid pulse of showing events unfolding, something other early movie makers were continually learning to grasp. With a diabolical villain who was a bridge between the 19th century Victorian criminal and the 20th century serial killer, "Fantomas" entertained audiences with his numerous disguises and trickery, performing almost implausible escapes from his arch nemesis, Police Inspector Juve.

    The serial would go on to inspire a wave of crime and adventure serials in the next decade, most notably Fritz Lang's "Dr. Mabuse." Feuillade himself would go on in a couple of years to write and direct his masterpiece, the much-heralded "Les Vampires," which influenced such notable directors as Alfred Hitchcock and Luis Bunuel.
    dbdumonteil

    Fantomas?/What did you say?/I said :"Fantomas" /What do you mean?

    For a person who would have read the Souvestre /Allain's novels,Feuillade's movies would fatally be a disappointment.I read them when I was sixteen and I was fascinated by this mysterious masked figure .Today "Fantomas" has lost much of its popularity ,probably because he was not a "nice "character ,like Arsene Lupin who is still enjoying success.But anyway Maurice Leblanc was a better writer than Pierre Souvestre and Marcel Allain.

    Feuillade's adaptation is not very satisfying:he ruled out the best part of the first volume ,which took place in a château where the marquise de Langrune was murdered (the first word of the saga is "Fantomas!" when nobody had still heard of him).That's after this crime that Charles Rambert became Jerome Fandor -in Feuillade's movie ,he is introduced as Juve's best friend whereas Juve really "made " Fandor.

    Even more embarrassing is the ending Feuillade chose -he had to make Gaumont's money work for them ;these are his own words- for what was primarily a horror story: in the novel,Valgrand is really guillotined .It's only a movie after all ,so what's the point of saving him apart from making a film "suitable for any audience"? The Danidoff episode seems out of its context.But the biggest mistake is to have shown Fantomas.Fantomas had no face or he had other people's faces (such as the actor's).By showing since the cast and credits the actor who plays the "hero",they make the character lose 90% of its appeal.

    Feuillade had talent for story telling ,nobody can deny.The scene of the substitution retains a sense of mystery .Feuillade's greatest merit -and it's quite important-was to attract the crowds : the serial genre forced them to come back and come back again if they wanted to know if the criminal would be finally caught.He was the granddaddy of so many series and miniseries in the world that he would never be thanked enough just for that.

    For people who would like to know about the first part of the novel,I would recommend Paul Féjos's "Fantomas" (1932),which includes spooky scenes in the old château and features Fandor when he was still Charles Rambert.

    The De Funes movies ,unless you are a fan of the actor ,should be avoided ,for they kept nothing from the novels but some of the proper nouns.

    On the other hand, Chabrol's miniseries in the late seventies /early eighties is to be commended:Helmut Berger was an ideal Fantomas and he got good support from Jacques Dufilho as Juve and from Pierre Mallet as Fandor.

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    Drama

    Storyline

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    • Connections
      Featured in Fantômas 70 (2001)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 7, 1916 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • Website with the information
    • Languages
      • None
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The Phantom Crook
    • Filming locations
      • 3 Rue Huraut, Villemomble, Seine-Saint-Denis, France(Beltham's house)
    • Production companies
      • Gaumont
      • Société des Etablissements L. Gaumont
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 54m
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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