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Augen ohne Gesicht

Originaltitel: Les yeux sans visage
  • 1960
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,6/10
37.283
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Pierre Brasseur in Augen ohne Gesicht (1960)
Tráiler [OV] ansehen
trailer wiedergeben1:15
1 Video
99+ Fotos
Body HorrorDramaHorror

Ein Chirurg verursacht einen Unfall, der seine Tochter entstellt, und geht zu weit, um ihr ein neues Gesicht zu geben.Ein Chirurg verursacht einen Unfall, der seine Tochter entstellt, und geht zu weit, um ihr ein neues Gesicht zu geben.Ein Chirurg verursacht einen Unfall, der seine Tochter entstellt, und geht zu weit, um ihr ein neues Gesicht zu geben.

  • Regie
    • Georges Franju
  • Drehbuch
    • Jean Redon
    • Pierre Boileau
    • Thomas Narcejac
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Pierre Brasseur
    • Alida Valli
    • Juliette Mayniel
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,6/10
    37.283
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Georges Franju
    • Drehbuch
      • Jean Redon
      • Pierre Boileau
      • Thomas Narcejac
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Pierre Brasseur
      • Alida Valli
      • Juliette Mayniel
    • 207Benutzerrezensionen
    • 121Kritische Rezensionen
    • 90Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Tráiler [OV]
    Trailer 1:15
    Tráiler [OV]

    Fotos113

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    Topbesetzung22

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    Pierre Brasseur
    Pierre Brasseur
    • Le docteur Génessier
    Alida Valli
    Alida Valli
    • Louise
    Juliette Mayniel
    Juliette Mayniel
    • Edna Grüber
    Alexandre Rignault
    Alexandre Rignault
    • L'inspecteur Parot
    Béatrice Altariba
    Béatrice Altariba
    • Paulette Meroudon
    Charles Blavette
    Charles Blavette
    • L'homme de la fourrière
    • (Gelöschte Szenen)
    • (as Blavette)
    Edith Scob
    Edith Scob
    • Christiane Génessier
    Claude Brasseur
    Claude Brasseur
    • Un inspecteur
    Michel Etcheverry
    • Le docteur Lherminier - médecin légiste…
    Yvette Etiévant
    Yvette Etiévant
    • La mère du petit malade
    René Génin
    René Génin
    • Henri Tessot
    Lucien Hubert
    • Un homme à l'enterrement
    Marcel Pérès
    Marcel Pérès
    • Un homme à l'enterrement
    François Guérin
    • Le docteur Jacques Vernon
    France Asselin
      Charles Bayard
      • Un homme à la conférence
      • (Nicht genannt)
      Gabrielle Doulcet
      • Une admiratrice du docteur Génessier
      • (Nicht genannt)
      Corrado Guarducci
        • Regie
          • Georges Franju
        • Drehbuch
          • Jean Redon
          • Pierre Boileau
          • Thomas Narcejac
        • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
        • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

        Benutzerrezensionen207

        7,637.2K
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        Empfohlene Bewertungen

        BRAINIAC-2

        Another opinion:

        "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!
        spoilsbury_toast_girl

        Beautiful Horror

        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.
        9The_Void

        Surreal fantasy masterpiece

        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.
        heedarmy

        Masterpiece of the genre

        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.
        8rooprect

        You'll never listen to Billy Idol the same way again

        Yes, in case you were wondering, Billy Idol's iconic 80s creepy-ballad "Eyes Without a Face" was directly influenced by this film (the haunting female vocals in the chorus are singing "les yeux sans visage", something I never noticed until I googled the lyrics just now). And this isn't just a passing association I'm mentioning for the sake of getting the attention of any 80s music fans out there; it actually relates to why this is such a great creepy-ballad of a film.

        "Les yeux sans visage" is only the 2nd feature film of director Georges Franju, but already he showed an absolute mastery of the craft, if not the creation of a whole new genre. This is broadly a horror story, but it's a horror story in the same sense that 2001: A Space Odyssey is a scifi flick. That is, it uses a certain fantasy genre but only as a backdrop to tell a deeper, universal, timeless story about the human condition. In particular, here we focus on the striking contrast between beauty and cruelty. And when I say "cruelty" I don't mean some cartoonish villain with a handlebar mustache cackling as he ties women to railroad tracks. No, here the "cruelty" is scientific, emotionless and in the literal sense of the word: amoral.

        Our villain "The Professor" (who doesn't have a handlebar mustache but is sporting a very Satanic goatee) is excellently played by Pierre Brasseur as a man who has no emotions. He has neither malice nor benevolence, even though on the surface we want to interpret his actions as such. We assume there's malice because he abducts and does nasty things to pretty young women for his medical experiments. We assume an ironic wisp of benevolence because these experiments are presumably to save the person closest to him, his daughter. But neither assumption is correct. The Professor is pure, unemotional science ("intellect"). He is intelligence without a heart. Balancing this character wonderfully is his daughter who is at first equally amoral--literally without morals like a newborn child--but with a strong, tender, emotional side ("soul") and an inclination to learn and evolve. What we get is a painful and beautiful contrast between the intellect and the soul.

        Which brings me to the soul half of the equation, and this is what elevates this far above and beyond any horror flick I've ever seen. The daughter is played by newcomer Edith Scob who spends half the film hiding behind a mask but whose graceful charms transcend facial expressions. Almost like a ballet dancer, she uses her body gracefully to convey every feeling we need to know. In fact it's her lack of facial expression that forces us to focus on her body language: movement and form instead. Further highlighting this expression of the human form, we get excellent cinematography, lighting, wardrobe (notice how she is dressed like a human doll) and ESPECIALLY the magical soundtrack giving her a themesong that sounds almost like a music box playing a lullaby.

        This brings me back to Billy Idol. You thought I forgot. Billy Idol's 1983 "Eyes Without a Face" was a soft, melodic lullaby ballad but with a very menacing edge to the lyrics and instrumentation when the guitars kick in. Just like this film does, it contrasted cruelty against beauty, something which hadn't been explored much in 80s pop music--as well as 50s/60s horror flicks.

        I have to admit, the first time I watched this movie I didn't really appreciate it the way I should have, much like the first time I heard Billy Idol's tune on the radio. But maybe this review has given you a head start; if you watch this film, keep this stuff in mind and maybe you'll appreciate it right away. "Les yeux sans visage" is not a horror story nor is it a battle between good vs evil. It's a study of beauty vs cruelty, both presented in the vacuum of amorality. This film defies all genres. I guess you could say you can't quite put a face to it. Ha. Seriously folks, you'll never forget it. (Get it? Never forget a FACE). Ok enough lame puns. I'll just close by mentioning that Edith Scob is gorgeous. Her face is really easy on the eyes.

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        Handlung

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        • Wissenswertes
          During the original release of the film, an English film critic for The Spectator was nearly fired for writing it a positive review, while the general critical reaction had been poor.
        • Patzer
          When she's not wearing it, Christiane's mask is very thick and heavy and would only seem to cover her face. When she puts it on, however, it is very thin, close-fitting, and seamlessly covers her jawline and the underside of her chin, revealing that the mask itself is a prop while the actress probably wears a combination of makeup and prosthetics.
        • Zitate

          Christiane Génessier: My face frightens me. My mask frightens me even more.

        • Alternative Versionen
          The films initial 1962 release to the US was edited and the film was re-titled. The surgery scene was cut down for content, while scenes that made Dr. Genessier seem sympathetic (particularly the scene where he cares for an ailing boy) were also edited.
        • Verbindungen
          Featured in Cinéma, de notre temps: Georges Franju, le visionnaire (1996)

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        Details

        Ändern
        • Erscheinungsdatum
          • 11. März 1960 (Westdeutschland)
        • Herkunftsländer
          • Frankreich
          • Italien
        • Sprache
          • Französisch
        • Auch bekannt als
          • Das Schreckenshaus des Dr. Génessier
        • Drehorte
          • Studios de Boulogne, Avenue Jean-Baptiste Clément, Boulogne-Billancourt, Hauts-de-Seine, Frankreich(Studio)
        • Produktionsfirmen
          • Champs-Élysées Productions
          • Lux Film
        • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

        Box Office

        Ändern
        • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
          • 58.565 $
        • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
          • 19.628 $
          • 2. Nov. 2003
        • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
          • 62.793 $
        Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

        Technische Daten

        Ändern
        • Laufzeit
          1 Stunde 30 Minuten
        • Farbe
          • Black and White
        • Seitenverhältnis
          • 1.66 : 1

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