Fantômas (1964 film)

1964 French film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fantômas (French pronunciation: [fɑ̃tomas]) is a 1964 French comedy film starring Jean Marais as the archvillain Fantômas opposite Louis de Funès as the earnest but outclassed commissaire Paul Juve. In the film Juve teams up with journalist Fandor, also played by Marais, trying to catch Fantômas but never quite succeeding. It was France's answer, in 1964, to the James Bond phenomenon that swept the world at around the same time. It is the first film of a trilogy,[2] and Fantômas became extremely successful in Europe, the Soviet Union, Japan, and the United States. Mylène Demongeot plays "Hélène Gurn", the girlfriend of "Jérôme Fandor", Fantômas' archenemy. The general tone of the films is more light-hearted than the original Fantômas novels. Commissaire Juve, as played by Louis de Funès, becomes a comedic character, much unlike his literary counterpart.[3]

Directed byAndré Hunebelle
Written byPierre Souvestre (novels)
Marcel Allain (novels)
Jean Halain (screenplay)
Pierre Foucaud (screenplay)
Produced byPaul Cadéac (delegate producer)
Cyril Grize (producer)
Alain Poiré (delegate producer)
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Fantômas
Theatrical poster
Directed byAndré Hunebelle
Written byPierre Souvestre (novels)
Marcel Allain (novels)
Jean Halain (screenplay)
Pierre Foucaud (screenplay)
Produced byPaul Cadéac (delegate producer)
Cyril Grize (producer)
Alain Poiré (delegate producer)
StarringJean Marais
Louis de Funès
Mylène Demongeot
CinematographyMarcel Grignon
Edited byJean Feyte
Music byMichel Magne
Production
company
Distributed byGaumont Distribution
Release date
  • 4 November 1964 (1964-11-04) (France)
Running time
105 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Box office$33.7 million[1]
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Plot

Fantômas is a man of many disguises. He uses maquillage as a weapon. He can impersonate anyone using an array of masks and can create endless confusion by constantly changing his appearance. In the first episode of the series he is unhappy with Fandor, because of a fictitious interview the journalist wrote about him. He takes his revenge by abducting Fandor and threatening to kill him. He then uses his formidable makeup skills to commit a spectacular crime while disguised like Fandor. When commissaire Juve joins the chase, chameleon-like Fantômas promptly commits a crime wearing a mask looking like Juve. In the end Fandor, Juve and Fandor's girlfriend Hélène are all on the master criminal's trail, all to no avail as the man of a thousand masks finally manages to escape.

Cast

More information Actor, Character ...
ActorCharacter
Jean MaraisFantômas / Fandor
Louis de FunèsCommissaire Juve
Mylène DemongeotHélène Gurn
Jacques DynamMichel Bertrand
Marie-Hélène ArnaudLady Beltham
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Release

Fantômas was released in France on 4 November 1964 and in the United States on 5 April 1966.

Reception

Fantômas was the fifth most popular film at the French box office in 1964[1] and it had admissions of 4,492,419.[4]

The Fantômas trilogy

More information Title, Release date ...
TitleRelease date
Fantômas4 November 1964
Fantômas se déchaîne8 December 1965
Fantômas contre Scotland Yard16 March 1967
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References

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