37 out of 41 people found the following comment useful :- Surreal fantasy masterpiece, 3 December 2004
Author:
The_Void from Beverley Hills, England
Georges Franju's atmospheric masterpiece is a tapestry of
contradictions. Eyes Without a Face is a compelling tale of sadism that
has an astute tenderness at the same time. A film that will disgust you
with it's macabre imagery, yet simultaneously mesmerise you with it's
beauty; a seething tale of love, fashioned by extreme guilt. Through
the Gothic confines of a grandiose mansion, Franju has taken ideas from
classic stories such as 'Frankenstein' and constructed a dream like
surrealistic fantasy that has inspired legions of filmmakers since:
from obvious inspirations like Jess Franco's The Awful Dr Orlof, all
the way to the full blown Hollywood action fest, Face/Off; Eyes Without
a Face stands out as one of cinema's most important, yet most
overlooked films. The central story is a deliriously simple tale of
vanity, guilt and redemption; yet one that is lent a great depth from
it's cast of central characters. Doctor Génessier, guilt ridden over a
car accident that left his beloved daughter, Christiane, with a
destroyed face uses his assistant to kidnap young girls in an attempt
to reconstruct her ruined features. The good doctor peels the faces
from his victims and grafts them over the ruined features of his young
daughter. However, the experiments are a continual failure but,
motivated by a strong sense of guilt, Doctor Génessier must keep
trying.
The doctor himself is a masterpiece of horror film villainy. Unlike
many mad scientists since, the doctor here is firmly placed within
reality which makes his motivations easy to believe and therefore the
horror all the more fascinating. He is supported by his assistant,
Louise; a fellow web of intrigue. Louise isn't the normal mad doctor's
assistant; she isn't deformed, or demented but rather a cunning,
malevolent and cerebral predator; gathering her victims to aid the
doctor's latest experiment. The real masterpiece of characterisation,
however, comes from the central character; the disfigured tragedy
herself, Christiane. The scenes that see her float around in her mask
gown are some of the most memorable ever brought to the screen. While
wearing her mask, Christiane represents both life and death. The mask
itself is stagnant and lifeless, but the eyes beneath the mask are full
of life's beauty, giving the young girl a surrealistic look that
epitomises the film in that it's hard to place; is it beautiful, or
revolting; good or evil?
This film is a rare treat in that it's actually frightening. Eyes
Without a Face taps into the viewer's fears by presenting us with a
situation that is terrifying because it involves a central character
living with horror. You can have all the maniacs with all the weapons
you can think of; but it doesn't compare to having to go to bed every
night with a face that is scarred beyond redemption. A fate worse than
death, I'm sure you'll agree. This premise is given conviction through
a stark and constantly foreboding atmosphere, which comes as a result
of Eugen Shuftan's magnificent cinematography. The film has a crisp and
clean look, which brilliantly offsets the macabre scenes that it is
capturing. Thankfully, Georges Franju also seems keen to keep the focus
on the surreal horror aspects of the story, which is shown by the way
that he rushes through the police investigation that stems from the
doctor's experiments. The film also features a striking and memorable
musical score. The music sounds like it wouldn't be out of place in a
carnival or circus, which fits the movie brilliantly as it covers the
weird and wonderful imagery that we are treated to on screen.
Overall, Eyes Without a Face is a magnificent expression of the horror
genre. The creativity and beauty of the film are sure to delight anyone
who encounters it, and this is as important and as breathtaking as
anything cinema has to offer. All I can say is that the word
'masterpiece' was added to the English language with this film in mind.
22 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :- Dark, desolate and diverting, 6 April 2003
Author:
NewEnglandPat from Virginia
This film is dark and somber with a sparse, repetitive music score that
suggests impending danger. A brilliant but deranged surgeon, having
caused his daughter's disfigurement in a car accident, loses touch with
reality and tries to restore her beauty in a most repulsive manner.
Undeterred by failure, Doctor Genessier continues his gruesome work,
hoping to find a miracle cure that will reconstruct Christiane's facial
features and also relieve him of his tremendous burden of guilt.
Christiane realizes that she will never enjoy a normal life or see her
beloved fiancé Jacques again. Her mute telephone calls to him just to
hear his voice show how empty and lonely her life has become. Juliet
Mayniel is touching as Edna, the young woman snared by the doctor's
assistant, Louise. The unfortunate girl, now imprisoned and a
post-surgery victim, her face wrapped in gauze and bandages, conveys
the horror of her situation with her eyes in a heart-wrenching scene
that is one of the film's best. Each character in this grim, unhappy
feature is victimized in some fashion, but in spite of its subject
matter, this cult classic is lean, first-rate storytelling.
"Eyes Without A Face" is a groundbreaking and trendsetting artistic
nightmare! The plot of this film has often been copied but never has it
been
done in such an eerily effective style. The sight of the masked daughter
playing with the dogs evokes many emotions in the viewer. There are shots
in
this movie that will stay with you long after you have seen it! Heavily
recommended!
17 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :- Beautiful Horror, 8 January 2006
Author:
zolaaar from Berlin, GER
At the time 'Les yeux sans visage' was released, the film was not very
popular and faced common rejection by the critics. Regardless of those
dis-affirmations, it raised to the position of a classic in the horror
genre. Franju - one of the founders of the legendary Cinemathèque
Française - succeeded in an intriguing way to make film history
sensible as a source of inspiration of an entirely peculiar vision.
The clinic of Dr. Génessier (P. Brasseur) is located not very far from
Paris. Famous as a specialist in skin grafting, nobody foreshadows that
the scientific ambition of the surgeon is incident with a horrifying
secret: Since an accident has destroyed the face of Génessier's
daughter, Christiane (Scob), the doctor does everything to reconstruct
her beauty. With the help of his assistant Louise (Valli) he clucks
young women in his remote mansion, benumbs them and makes them a victim
of a macabre surgical operation. In a hidden operating room in the
basement of his house, Génessier removes the facial skin and
transplants it on Christiane's face. Without lasting successes.
That Franjus film has not suffer losses from its immensely disturbing
effects is because of, if nothing else, the camera work of Eugen
Schüfftans. His brilliant black and white shots resurrects the bright
dark of the expressionist German silent film. It imparts Villa
Génessier a threatening life of it's own, transmutes it in a mazy
horror house which seems like one can not escape. The shadows of the
stairway handrails lay on everybody who enters the building like grids
and makes him optically a prisoner of Génessier's delusion, mostly his
daughter Christiane. Cut from a real life she haunts through the
paternal ruins, the garbled face concealed behind a white porcelain
mask, whose sad expression seems to nail the doom of the young woman.
Christiane's mask also points out a central principle of formation of
the film: It's suspense results substantially from the interaction of
visible and invisible things, of showing and dissembling. Franju subtly
creates a nightmarish atmosphere that evokes the horror of Génessier's
actions, but never makes it explicitly in the first instance - only to
show it the viewer more pitilessly: When the surgeon unprovided cuts
into the juvenilely beautiful face of one of his victims. This moment
of shocking intensity reminds of the razor blade cut through the
woman's eye of Bunuel's surrealistic classic 'Un chien andalou' (1929).
With the same zest to provoke, Franju also presents the result of an
ostensibly succeeded operation: A sober sequence of photographs shows,
commented by Génessier off-stage, at first Christiane's angelically
delicate face, then how the transplanted skin becomes patchy a few days
later, splits open and two weeks later dies off. The cruelty of those
two sequences exposes Génessier as a perverted, pestilent doctor and
his paternal love as brutal obsession. The attempt to give his daughter
a new face means at the same time to erase her identity, to create the
ideal woman.
'Les yeux sans visage' remains in the memory of the viewer as one of
the rare places on the imaginary continent, phantasmagoric and exigent
with ample suspense and shocking details, a perfect alchemy of horror
and allegoric poesy whereby one of the most beautiful horror films came
into being.
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Poetic Horror, 5 May 2006
Author:
Galina from Virginia, USA
Georges Franju's version of a mad scientist trying to play God tells
about a brilliant but controlling and obsessive doctor who is trying to
restore the face of his own beloved daughter that was horribly
disfigured in a car accident caused by his reckless driving. He
requires tissues of recently deceased young women that look like his
daughter and he is not going to wait for them to die in an accident -
he creates the accidents with help of his loyal
secretary/nurse/lover/former patient Louise (Alida Valli of "The Third
Man") who kidnaps the unsuspecting girls and brings them to the
secluded mansion in one of Paris's suburbs where Doctor Génessier is
ready to perform the fascinating and horrifying surgeries.
"Eyes without a Face" is a very impressive, classy picture that has
inspired many later horror movies. The music by Maurice Jarr adds to
the uneasy and creepy atmosphere - it makes you feel like on the
never-stopping ominous merry-go-round and you can't get off it.
13 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- A masterpiece of horror and poetry, 10 November 1999
Author:
Darragh O' Donoghue (hitch1899_@hotmail.com) from Dublin, Ireland
Along with THE SHINING, THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN and PSYCHO, the best
horror film ever made. Franju forsakes the usual signifiers of the genre -
hurtling pace, quick editing, signalling music, hysterically scary scenes -
in favour of a pace as funereal and petrified as its heroine's face. A
soul-chilling film, seeped of all emotion, its scientific subject matter
belies a timeless, complicated, non-judgemental Gothic fable about the
destruction of innocence, the carelessness of masculine authority and the
exploitation of women (especially in art). The many paralells with VERTIGO
(the source novel was written by the same writers), the startling tree and
animal imagery, the suspended dream logic and the perverse comic sense
ensure this film as a classic, and makes one yearn for more
Franju.
10 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- A classic, providing real chills, 8 July 2003
Author:
Phil Hinchliffe (phil0011@hotmail.com) from Leeds, England
An early French chiller that set a benchmark in horror film making, with
its
unflinching depiction of horrific acts of surgery. The films sole purpose
is
to shock you in revealing things never before seen in 1959. Unfortunately,
we are now in the age of cheap teen horror flicks and action films that
feel
the need to throw gore in our faces at every possible moment thus
diminishing the impact of this film when watching it. Especially now we're
in the 21st century, many of the scenes are comparatively tame. This does
not mean, however, I disliked the film. Quite the contrary. Eyes Without A
Face contains some truly terrifying images that make the hairs stand up on
the back of your neck. The use of a woman in a white mask (a technique
used
so well in films such as Halloween and Friday the 13th) provides the films
more memorable and spine tingling moments. It's the clever use of shade
and
light that make this possible as the director and cinematographer provide
us
with long -lasting images to chill to the bone.
The pace of the film is also worth a mention. Franju (the director) keeps
us
on the edge of our seat as the rich upper class couple lead young women
into
their house in order to remove their face! For some the pace could prove
rather too slow - as in truth it did for me once or twice. But the payoffs
from the slow pace offset any problems posed by it. It actually comes as a
relief from the many directors who, in this day, believe that quick cuts
and
loud noise provide terror. Maybe it's time they delved back into the likes
of this film, Halloween and Psycho to provide them with a few
inspirations.
I can think of only a handful of directors that have provided me with any
real fright in the past ten years - M. Night Shyamalan (The Sixth Sense
and
Signs), Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sanchez (The Blair Witch Project) and
Wes
Craven (Scream) are some of the few I can mention. Other films like the
truly awful Jeepers Creepers and Thirteen Ghosts, which served no real
purpose what-so-ever, provided me with quick cuts and loud noises -
neither
of which particularly endeared me to their cause. Call me an old fuddy
duddy, but it's time they made more horrors like they did in the old
days -
films with real suspense and images which truly frighten; films like this
one.
Well, that's my moan over with. I gave this film 8/10, for those that
care.
12 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :- Masterpiece of the genre, 1 December 2000
Author:
heedarmy from United Kingdom
George Franju's "Yeux Sans Visage" is extremely slow yet absolutely
riveting. The direction is masterful and Pierre Brasseur is superb as the
dedicated doctor whose love for his daughter leads him to commit unspeakable
crimes.
The cold, sinister atmosphere of the film will seep into your bones and you
may find it hard to look at the screen when the central skin-removal
operation takes place - this is an extraordinarily grisly sequence for its
time, lent all the more power by the cold, matter-of-fact direction and
acting.
In a film full of haunting images, you will find the last one
unforgettable.
Why can't modern directors make horror films as good as this? It deals with
a potentially lurid, gory subject-matter with masterly subtlety and
skill.
8 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- Beautiful and hideous at once, 6 October 1999
Author:
Stephen-12 from London, England
This is one of those oddities that makes an interest in cinema worthwhile.
Like the equally atmospheric Carnival of Souls, it was made by a director
whose primary activity lay in documentaries, and can very much be regarded
as a 'one-off'.
Franju's vision is at once beautiful and emetic: on the one hand, we have
the stunning face of Edith Scob, the weird sight of her masked figure
running into the night, the sequences which are held for longer than seems
natural; on the other hand, arguably the most nauseating operation scenes
committed to film (and somehow more unpleasant for being in black and
white). The atmosphere is one of quiet poetry, but the juxtaposition with
horror makes it unusual and effective. A connoisseur's delight. 9 out of
10.
See it, if you can stomach it.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- one is held in awe and horror right to the stunning finale, 24 August 2005
Author:
christopher-underwood from Greenwich - London
Still powerful after all this time. I remember, when first seeing this
in the early sixties, being outraged that I was asked to pay to see
what I compared to watching people have their teeth pulled. Not having
seen it since till now I have always remembered that scene, but also
the poignant lead in the lifelike mask that floated about the palatial
dwelling like some surreal being and always that dreadful sound of the
caged dogs barking. Much emphasis on the sounds of things being
dragged, scraped and dropped - steel and stone and a dark menacing
outside from whence young girls are brought in the name of science and
in particular a new face for the masked one. Extremely strong central
scene and always the threat of more. The police and routine hospital
scenes give brief respite but for most of this masterpiece one is held
in awe and horror right to the stunning finale.
Own the rights?

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37 out of 41 people found the following comment useful :-

Surreal fantasy masterpiece, 3 December 2004
Author: The_Void from Beverley Hills, England
Georges Franju's atmospheric masterpiece is a tapestry of contradictions. Eyes Without a Face is a compelling tale of sadism that has an astute tenderness at the same time. A film that will disgust you with it's macabre imagery, yet simultaneously mesmerise you with it's beauty; a seething tale of love, fashioned by extreme guilt. Through the Gothic confines of a grandiose mansion, Franju has taken ideas from classic stories such as 'Frankenstein' and constructed a dream like surrealistic fantasy that has inspired legions of filmmakers since: from obvious inspirations like Jess Franco's The Awful Dr Orlof, all the way to the full blown Hollywood action fest, Face/Off; Eyes Without a Face stands out as one of cinema's most important, yet most overlooked films. The central story is a deliriously simple tale of vanity, guilt and redemption; yet one that is lent a great depth from it's cast of central characters. Doctor Génessier, guilt ridden over a car accident that left his beloved daughter, Christiane, with a destroyed face uses his assistant to kidnap young girls in an attempt to reconstruct her ruined features. The good doctor peels the faces from his victims and grafts them over the ruined features of his young daughter. However, the experiments are a continual failure but, motivated by a strong sense of guilt, Doctor Génessier must keep trying.
The doctor himself is a masterpiece of horror film villainy. Unlike many mad scientists since, the doctor here is firmly placed within reality which makes his motivations easy to believe and therefore the horror all the more fascinating. He is supported by his assistant, Louise; a fellow web of intrigue. Louise isn't the normal mad doctor's assistant; she isn't deformed, or demented but rather a cunning, malevolent and cerebral predator; gathering her victims to aid the doctor's latest experiment. The real masterpiece of characterisation, however, comes from the central character; the disfigured tragedy herself, Christiane. The scenes that see her float around in her mask gown are some of the most memorable ever brought to the screen. While wearing her mask, Christiane represents both life and death. The mask itself is stagnant and lifeless, but the eyes beneath the mask are full of life's beauty, giving the young girl a surrealistic look that epitomises the film in that it's hard to place; is it beautiful, or revolting; good or evil?
This film is a rare treat in that it's actually frightening. Eyes Without a Face taps into the viewer's fears by presenting us with a situation that is terrifying because it involves a central character living with horror. You can have all the maniacs with all the weapons you can think of; but it doesn't compare to having to go to bed every night with a face that is scarred beyond redemption. A fate worse than death, I'm sure you'll agree. This premise is given conviction through a stark and constantly foreboding atmosphere, which comes as a result of Eugen Shuftan's magnificent cinematography. The film has a crisp and clean look, which brilliantly offsets the macabre scenes that it is capturing. Thankfully, Georges Franju also seems keen to keep the focus on the surreal horror aspects of the story, which is shown by the way that he rushes through the police investigation that stems from the doctor's experiments. The film also features a striking and memorable musical score. The music sounds like it wouldn't be out of place in a carnival or circus, which fits the movie brilliantly as it covers the weird and wonderful imagery that we are treated to on screen.
Overall, Eyes Without a Face is a magnificent expression of the horror genre. The creativity and beauty of the film are sure to delight anyone who encounters it, and this is as important and as breathtaking as anything cinema has to offer. All I can say is that the word 'masterpiece' was added to the English language with this film in mind.
22 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :-
Dark, desolate and diverting, 6 April 2003
Author: NewEnglandPat from Virginia
This film is dark and somber with a sparse, repetitive music score that suggests impending danger. A brilliant but deranged surgeon, having caused his daughter's disfigurement in a car accident, loses touch with reality and tries to restore her beauty in a most repulsive manner. Undeterred by failure, Doctor Genessier continues his gruesome work, hoping to find a miracle cure that will reconstruct Christiane's facial features and also relieve him of his tremendous burden of guilt. Christiane realizes that she will never enjoy a normal life or see her beloved fiancé Jacques again. Her mute telephone calls to him just to hear his voice show how empty and lonely her life has become. Juliet Mayniel is touching as Edna, the young woman snared by the doctor's assistant, Louise. The unfortunate girl, now imprisoned and a post-surgery victim, her face wrapped in gauze and bandages, conveys the horror of her situation with her eyes in a heart-wrenching scene that is one of the film's best. Each character in this grim, unhappy feature is victimized in some fashion, but in spite of its subject matter, this cult classic is lean, first-rate storytelling.
19 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-
Another opinion:, 18 November 1999
Author: Brian D. Horrorwitz (brian@trashpalace.com) from Maryland
"Eyes Without A Face" is a groundbreaking and trendsetting artistic nightmare! The plot of this film has often been copied but never has it been done in such an eerily effective style. The sight of the masked daughter playing with the dogs evokes many emotions in the viewer. There are shots in this movie that will stay with you long after you have seen it! Heavily recommended!
17 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :-

Beautiful Horror, 8 January 2006
Author: zolaaar from Berlin, GER
At the time 'Les yeux sans visage' was released, the film was not very popular and faced common rejection by the critics. Regardless of those dis-affirmations, it raised to the position of a classic in the horror genre. Franju - one of the founders of the legendary Cinemathèque Française - succeeded in an intriguing way to make film history sensible as a source of inspiration of an entirely peculiar vision.
The clinic of Dr. Génessier (P. Brasseur) is located not very far from Paris. Famous as a specialist in skin grafting, nobody foreshadows that the scientific ambition of the surgeon is incident with a horrifying secret: Since an accident has destroyed the face of Génessier's daughter, Christiane (Scob), the doctor does everything to reconstruct her beauty. With the help of his assistant Louise (Valli) he clucks young women in his remote mansion, benumbs them and makes them a victim of a macabre surgical operation. In a hidden operating room in the basement of his house, Génessier removes the facial skin and transplants it on Christiane's face. Without lasting successes.
That Franjus film has not suffer losses from its immensely disturbing effects is because of, if nothing else, the camera work of Eugen Schüfftans. His brilliant black and white shots resurrects the bright dark of the expressionist German silent film. It imparts Villa Génessier a threatening life of it's own, transmutes it in a mazy horror house which seems like one can not escape. The shadows of the stairway handrails lay on everybody who enters the building like grids and makes him optically a prisoner of Génessier's delusion, mostly his daughter Christiane. Cut from a real life she haunts through the paternal ruins, the garbled face concealed behind a white porcelain mask, whose sad expression seems to nail the doom of the young woman.
Christiane's mask also points out a central principle of formation of the film: It's suspense results substantially from the interaction of visible and invisible things, of showing and dissembling. Franju subtly creates a nightmarish atmosphere that evokes the horror of Génessier's actions, but never makes it explicitly in the first instance - only to show it the viewer more pitilessly: When the surgeon unprovided cuts into the juvenilely beautiful face of one of his victims. This moment of shocking intensity reminds of the razor blade cut through the woman's eye of Bunuel's surrealistic classic 'Un chien andalou' (1929). With the same zest to provoke, Franju also presents the result of an ostensibly succeeded operation: A sober sequence of photographs shows, commented by Génessier off-stage, at first Christiane's angelically delicate face, then how the transplanted skin becomes patchy a few days later, splits open and two weeks later dies off. The cruelty of those two sequences exposes Génessier as a perverted, pestilent doctor and his paternal love as brutal obsession. The attempt to give his daughter a new face means at the same time to erase her identity, to create the ideal woman.
'Les yeux sans visage' remains in the memory of the viewer as one of the rare places on the imaginary continent, phantasmagoric and exigent with ample suspense and shocking details, a perfect alchemy of horror and allegoric poesy whereby one of the most beautiful horror films came into being.
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

Poetic Horror, 5 May 2006
Author: Galina from Virginia, USA
Georges Franju's version of a mad scientist trying to play God tells about a brilliant but controlling and obsessive doctor who is trying to restore the face of his own beloved daughter that was horribly disfigured in a car accident caused by his reckless driving. He requires tissues of recently deceased young women that look like his daughter and he is not going to wait for them to die in an accident - he creates the accidents with help of his loyal secretary/nurse/lover/former patient Louise (Alida Valli of "The Third Man") who kidnaps the unsuspecting girls and brings them to the secluded mansion in one of Paris's suburbs where Doctor Génessier is ready to perform the fascinating and horrifying surgeries.
"Eyes without a Face" is a very impressive, classy picture that has inspired many later horror movies. The music by Maurice Jarr adds to the uneasy and creepy atmosphere - it makes you feel like on the never-stopping ominous merry-go-round and you can't get off it.
13 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-

A masterpiece of horror and poetry, 10 November 1999
Author: Darragh O' Donoghue (hitch1899_@hotmail.com) from Dublin, Ireland
Along with THE SHINING, THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN and PSYCHO, the best horror film ever made. Franju forsakes the usual signifiers of the genre - hurtling pace, quick editing, signalling music, hysterically scary scenes - in favour of a pace as funereal and petrified as its heroine's face. A soul-chilling film, seeped of all emotion, its scientific subject matter belies a timeless, complicated, non-judgemental Gothic fable about the destruction of innocence, the carelessness of masculine authority and the exploitation of women (especially in art). The many paralells with VERTIGO (the source novel was written by the same writers), the startling tree and animal imagery, the suspended dream logic and the perverse comic sense ensure this film as a classic, and makes one yearn for more Franju.
10 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

A classic, providing real chills, 8 July 2003
Author: Phil Hinchliffe (phil0011@hotmail.com) from Leeds, England
An early French chiller that set a benchmark in horror film making, with its unflinching depiction of horrific acts of surgery. The films sole purpose is to shock you in revealing things never before seen in 1959. Unfortunately, we are now in the age of cheap teen horror flicks and action films that feel the need to throw gore in our faces at every possible moment thus diminishing the impact of this film when watching it. Especially now we're in the 21st century, many of the scenes are comparatively tame. This does not mean, however, I disliked the film. Quite the contrary. Eyes Without A Face contains some truly terrifying images that make the hairs stand up on the back of your neck. The use of a woman in a white mask (a technique used so well in films such as Halloween and Friday the 13th) provides the films more memorable and spine tingling moments. It's the clever use of shade and light that make this possible as the director and cinematographer provide us with long -lasting images to chill to the bone.
The pace of the film is also worth a mention. Franju (the director) keeps us on the edge of our seat as the rich upper class couple lead young women into their house in order to remove their face! For some the pace could prove rather too slow - as in truth it did for me once or twice. But the payoffs from the slow pace offset any problems posed by it. It actually comes as a relief from the many directors who, in this day, believe that quick cuts and loud noise provide terror. Maybe it's time they delved back into the likes of this film, Halloween and Psycho to provide them with a few inspirations. I can think of only a handful of directors that have provided me with any real fright in the past ten years - M. Night Shyamalan (The Sixth Sense and Signs), Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sanchez (The Blair Witch Project) and Wes Craven (Scream) are some of the few I can mention. Other films like the truly awful Jeepers Creepers and Thirteen Ghosts, which served no real purpose what-so-ever, provided me with quick cuts and loud noises - neither of which particularly endeared me to their cause. Call me an old fuddy duddy, but it's time they made more horrors like they did in the old days - films with real suspense and images which truly frighten; films like this one.
Well, that's my moan over with. I gave this film 8/10, for those that care.
12 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-
Masterpiece of the genre, 1 December 2000
Author: heedarmy from United Kingdom
George Franju's "Yeux Sans Visage" is extremely slow yet absolutely riveting. The direction is masterful and Pierre Brasseur is superb as the dedicated doctor whose love for his daughter leads him to commit unspeakable crimes.
The cold, sinister atmosphere of the film will seep into your bones and you may find it hard to look at the screen when the central skin-removal operation takes place - this is an extraordinarily grisly sequence for its time, lent all the more power by the cold, matter-of-fact direction and acting.
In a film full of haunting images, you will find the last one unforgettable.
Why can't modern directors make horror films as good as this? It deals with a potentially lurid, gory subject-matter with masterly subtlety and skill.
8 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-

Beautiful and hideous at once, 6 October 1999
Author: Stephen-12 from London, England
This is one of those oddities that makes an interest in cinema worthwhile. Like the equally atmospheric Carnival of Souls, it was made by a director whose primary activity lay in documentaries, and can very much be regarded as a 'one-off'.
Franju's vision is at once beautiful and emetic: on the one hand, we have the stunning face of Edith Scob, the weird sight of her masked figure running into the night, the sequences which are held for longer than seems natural; on the other hand, arguably the most nauseating operation scenes committed to film (and somehow more unpleasant for being in black and white). The atmosphere is one of quiet poetry, but the juxtaposition with horror makes it unusual and effective. A connoisseur's delight. 9 out of 10. See it, if you can stomach it.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

one is held in awe and horror right to the stunning finale, 24 August 2005
Author: christopher-underwood from Greenwich - London
Still powerful after all this time. I remember, when first seeing this in the early sixties, being outraged that I was asked to pay to see what I compared to watching people have their teeth pulled. Not having seen it since till now I have always remembered that scene, but also the poignant lead in the lifelike mask that floated about the palatial dwelling like some surreal being and always that dreadful sound of the caged dogs barking. Much emphasis on the sounds of things being dragged, scraped and dropped - steel and stone and a dark menacing outside from whence young girls are brought in the name of science and in particular a new face for the masked one. Extremely strong central scene and always the threat of more. The police and routine hospital scenes give brief respite but for most of this masterpiece one is held in awe and horror right to the stunning finale.
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