Les Yeux sans visage, 1959
[Eyes Without a Face]
Eyes
Without a Face opens to the sound of
a jaunty and strangely carnivalesque music as an apprehensive
and distracted woman named Louise (Alida Valli) hurriedly navigates
through a dark and empty stretch of highway, momentarily veering
off course to the side of the road by the ominous sight of a
speeding vehicle quickly approaching from the rearview mirror,
before continuing on her undefined task. Stopping by a secluded
riverbank along the Seine, she drags the lifeless body of her
passenger and, with a violent splash, disposes of the unidentifiable
victim into the shallow waters. The following morning, an esteemed
medical research professor, Dr. Génessier (Pierre Brasseur),
conducts a clinical lecture on the process of heterografting - the
transplantation of living tissue from one biologically compatible
organism to another that he proposes can be fostered by
exsanguination and radiation of the patient - as a means of
preserving and re-capturing youth. Meanwhile, having recovered
the partially nude body from the Seine, the police summon the
parents of two young women who reportedly disappeared from the
area for possible identification: Emile Tessot (René
Génin), the father of a missing student named Simone, and
Dr. Génessier whose daughter, Christiane (Edith Scob),
facially disfigured in an automobile accident caused by his
recklessness, is believed to have committed suicide. Arriving
early at the morgue, Dr. Génessier claims the faceless
body as his daughter's, and turns away the anxious Tessot. However,
the seemingly tragic resolution to Christiane's fate proves more
obscured when, during the funeral, Louise is revealed to be Dr.
Génessier's personal assistant and former patient, and
subsequently, the despondent Christiane, in seclusion at the
professor's remote sanatorium, discovers a signed death certificate
bearing her name. Gradually, the details of Dr. Génessier
and Louise's unconscionable plot are revealed, as the two devoted
custodians, driven by love, guilt, and madness, return to their
sinister routine in a desperate attempt to restore Christiane's
shattered face...and life.
Based on a novel by Jean Redon
(and adapted for film by Redon, the writing team of Pierre Boileau and
Thomas Narcejac who would later collaborated on the adaptations for
Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo
and Henri-Georges Cluozot's Les
Diaboliques, and Claude
Sautet who also served as assistant director),
Eyes Without a Face is
an atmospheric, exquisitely stylized, and deeply disturbing portrait of obsession,
inhumanity, and the elusive quest for perfection. Georges
Franju juxtaposes elements of visual dichotomy and expressionist
imagery - chiaroscuro lighting, acute angle shots, and grotesque
forms - to create a polarized and dystopian perspective that reflect
the characters' psychological disconnection and increasing myopic
obsession: Dr. Génessier's ascent to his daughter's room after
her discover of the death certificate, the unfocused framing of an
unmasked Christiane during Edna's (Juliette Mayniel) encounter with
her while in a state of delirium, her shifting countenance of transitory
beauty and permanent disfigurement, the bizarre menagerie of caged
birds and rescued wild dogs confined in the cellar. A provocative
psychological examination that alternately conveys affection and
horror, compassion and atrocity, devotion and mania, Eyes
Without a Face serves a haunting and
indelible portrait on the abusive and dehumanizing toll of desolation,
violence, captivity, and vanity.
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