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===Home media===
===Home media===


On 16 May 2000, the film was released on [[DVD]] in the US by [[Image Entertainment]] on two discs, with music by Robert Israel. Additional features to this version are the short films ''For the Children'' (a wartime fundraiser starring the cast of ''Les Vampires'') and ''Bout de Zan and the Shirker'' (a comedy featuring René Poyen), as well as a supplementary essay on the film "The Public Is My Master" by Fabrice Zagury. [[Gaumont Film Company|Gaumont]] released a special French restored edition On 22 March 2006. Containing 4 discs, it also includes a documentary on Feuillade titled ''Louis Feuillade at Work'', a featurette on the serial's restoration and a 32-page booklet. On 24 March 2008 [[Artificial Eye]] released a 3 disc UK edition, which includes five short films and a new musical accompaniment by Éric le Guen. On 14 August 2012 a [[Blu-ray Disc]] version was released by [[Kino International (company)|Kino International]] on two discs, remastered from the [[Cinémathèque Française]] 35mm film restoration, with a musical score by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra and a trailer for ''Fantômas''.<ref name = SilenEra/><ref name = SlantMagAgain/>
On 16 May 2000, the film was released on [[DVD]] in the US by [[Image Entertainment]] on two discs, with music by Robert Israel. Additional features to this version are the short films ''For the Children'' (a wartime fundraiser starring the cast of ''Les Vampires'') and ''Bout de Zan and the Shirker'' (a comedy featuring René Poyen), as well as a supplementary essay on the film "The Public Is My Master" by Fabrice Zagury. [[Gaumont Film Company|Gaumont]] released a special French restored edition on 22 March 2006. Containing 4 discs, it also includes a documentary on Feuillade titled ''Louis Feuillade at Work'', a featurette on the serial's restoration and a 32-page booklet. On 24 March 2008 [[Artificial Eye]] released a 3 disc UK edition, which includes five short films and a new musical accompaniment by Éric le Guen. On 14 August 2012 a [[Blu-ray Disc]] version was released by [[Kino International (company)|Kino International]] on two discs, remastered from the [[Cinémathèque Française]] 35mm film restoration, with a musical score by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra and a trailer for ''Fantômas''.<ref name = SilenEra/><ref name = SlantMagAgain/>


==Critical reception==
==Critical reception==

Revision as of 18:52, 16 May 2020

Les Vampires
File:Lesvampires.PNG
Early French Les Vampires poster
Directed byLouis Feuillade
Written byLouis Feuillade
Produced byGaumont
StarringÉdouard Mathé
Musidora
Marcel Lévesque
CinematographyManichoux
Music byRobert Israel (2000)
Éric le Guen (2008)
Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra (2012)
Distributed byGaumont
Release date
13 November 1915 – 30 June 1916
Running time
10 Episodes (417 minutes)
CountryFrance
LanguageSilent (with French intertitles)

Les Vampires is a 1915–16 French silent crime serial film written and directed by Louis Feuillade. Set in Paris, it stars Édouard Mathé, Musidora and Marcel Lévesque. The main characters are a journalist and his friend who become involved in trying to uncover and stop a bizarre underground Apache gang, known as The Vampires (who are not the mythological beings their name suggests). The serial consists of ten episodes, which vary greatly in length. Being roughly 7 hours long, it is considered one of the longest films ever made.[1] It was produced and distributed by Feuillade's company Gaumont. Due to its stylistic similarities with Feuillade's other crime serials Fantômas and Judex, the three are often considered a trilogy.[2]

Fresh from the success of Feuillade's previous serial, Fantômas, and facing competition from rival company Pathé, Feuillade made the film quickly and inexpensively with very little written script. Upon its initial release Les Vampires was given negative reviews by critics for its dubious morality and its lack of cinematic techniques compared to other films.[3] However, it was a massive success with its wartime audience, making Musidora a star of French cinema.[4] The film has since come under re-evaluation and is considered by many to be Feuillade's magnum opus and a cinematic masterpiece. It is recognised for developing thriller techniques, adopted by Alfred Hitchcock and Fritz Lang,[5] and avant-garde cinema, inspiring Luis Buñuel and others.[6] It is included in the book 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die.[7]

Plot

English title French title Released Runtime
1"The Severed Head""La Tête Coupée"13 November 191533 mins.
2"The Ring That Kills""La Bague Qui Tue"13 November 191515 mins.
3"The Red Codebook""Le Cryptogramme Rouge"4 December 191539 mins.
4"The Spectre""Le Spectre"7 January 191630 mins.
5"Dead Man's Escape""L'évasion Du Mort"28 January 191635 mins.
6"Hypnotic Eyes""Les Yeux Qui Fascinent"24 March 191654 mins.
7"Satanas""Satanus"15 April 191646 mins.
8"The Thunder Master""Le Maître de la Foudre"12 May 191652 mins.
9"The Poisoner""L'homme des Poisons"2 June 191648 mins.
10"The Terrible Wedding""Les Noces Sanglantes"30 June 191660 mins.

Episode 1 – "The Severed Head"

Episode 1 : The Severed Head (1915)
Philippe Guérande (Édouard Mathé, right) interviews Dr. Nox (Jean Aymé, left) in "The Severed Head".

Philippe Guérande (Édouard Mathé), a reporter working for the newspaper "The Paris Chronicle" who is investigating a criminal organisation called the Vampires, receives a telegram at work stating that the decapitated body of the national security agent in charge of the Vampire investigations, Inspector Durtal, was found in the swamps near Saint-Clement-Sur-Cher, with the head missing. Being turned down by the local magistrate (Thelès), he spends the night in a nearby castle owned by Dr. Nox (Jean Aymé), an old friend of his father, along with Mrs. Simpson (Rita Herlor), an American multimillionaire who desires the property. After waking up in the night, Philippe finds a note in his pocket saying "Give up your search, otherwise bad luck awaits you! – The Vampires", and discovers a mysterious passage behind a painting in his room. Meanwhile, Mrs. Simpson's money and jewels are stolen in her sleep by a masked thief, but Philippe is suspected of the crime. Philippe again visits the magistrate, who now believes his case, and they trick Dr. Nox and Mrs. Simpson into waiting in an anteroom. At the castle, Philippe and the magistrate find the head of Inspector Durtal hidden in the passage in Philippe's room. Back in the anteroom, they find that Mrs. Simpson is dead and that Dr. Nox has vanished. Her pocket contains a note from the Grand Vampire saying that he has murdered the real Dr. Nox and is now assuming his identity.

Episode 2 – "The Ring That Kills"

Episode 2 : The Ring That Kills (1915)
Marfa Koutiloff (Stacia Napierkowska) dancing as a vampire bat in "The Ring That Kills"

Grand Vampire in disguise as Count de Noirmoutier, reads that ballerina Marfa Koutiloff (Stacia Napierkowska), who is engaged to Philippe, will perform a ballet called The Vampires. To prevent her from publicizing the Vampires' activities and to deter Philippe, he gives Marfa a poisoned ring before her performance, which kills her onstage. Amidst the panicking crowds Philippe recognizes the Grand Vampire and follows him to an abandoned fort and is captured by the gang. They agree to interrogate Philippe at midnight and execute him at dawn. Philippe finds that the Vampire guarding him is one of his co-workers, Oscar-Cloud Mazamette (Marcel Lévesque). They decide to work together and capture the Grand Inquisitor when he arrives at midnight. They bind and hood the Grand Inquisitor, and set him up for execution in place of Phillipe. At dawn the Vampires arrive for the execution, but the police raid the lair. The Vampires escape, but as they flee they mistakenly execute their own Grand Inquisitor, who turns out to be the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.

Episode 3 – "The Red Codebook"

Episode 3 : The Red Codebook (1915)
Irma Vep (Musidora) singing in the "Howling Cat" nightclub in "The Red Codebook".

While faking illness to get off work, Philippe tries to decode a red booklet that he lifted from the Grand Inquisitor's body, which contains the crimes of the Vampires. He discovers that his house is under surveillance by the Vampires, so he leaves in disguise. Following clues in the booklet he arrives at "The Howling Cat" night club. Performing there is Irma Vep (Musidora), whose name Philippe sees is an anagram for vampire. After her act, the Grand Vampire assigns Irma to retrieve the red booklet. As Philippe returns home Mazamette arrives, along with a poison pen he stole from the Grand Vampire. A few days later, Irma arrives at their house disguised as a new maid, but Philippe recognizes her. She tries to poison him, but fails. His mother (Delphine Renot) leaves to meet her brother after receiving word that he has been in a car accident, but it turns out to be a trap and she is captured by the Vampires. While Philippe is asleep, Irma lets another Vampire into his home but he shoots them. They escape, however, because his gun was loaded with blanks. In a shack in the slums, Philippe's mother is held by Father Silence (Louis Leubas), a deaf-mute, and is forced to sign a ransom note, but she kills him with Mazamette's poison pen and escapes.

Episode 4 – "The Spectre"

Episode 4 : The Spectre (1916)

The Grand Vampire, under the alias of a real estate broker "Treps", meets Juan-José Moréno (Fernand Herrmann), a businessman, who asks for an apartment with a safe. The Grand Vampire puts Moréno into an apartment whose safe is rigged to be opened from the rear through the party wall of an apartment belonging to Irma Vep and the Grand Vampire. However, the case Moréno places inside contains the Vampires’ black attire. Later, in disguise as bank secretary "Juliette Bertaux", Irma learns that a man called Mr. Metadier has to bring 300,000 to another branch. In the event that he is unable to make the delivery, Irma will. Soon afterward, Mr. Metadier is murdered by the Vampires and his body thrown from a train. When Irma is about to take the money for him a spectre of Mr. Metadier appears and takes it instead. The Grand Vampire pursues the spectre, who escapes down a manhole. Later that day, Mme. Metadier appears at the bank, saying she hasn’t seen her husband in days. They also find out that the money hasn’t been delivered. Philippe learns of this and goes to the bank in disguise. Recognizing the secretary as Irma, he finds her address and a few hours later sneaks in, using Mazamette as a ploy. Irma and the Grand Vampire open the safe from their side, only to find Metadier's body and the money. Philippe tries to capture them but is knocked down and they escape. Philippe calls the police just as Moréno enters and finds his safe opened from the other side. He walks through and is caught by Philippe. Moréno is revealed to be another criminal in disguise, and claims not to have killed Metadier, but to have found his body by the train tracks where the Vampires had dumped it. Moréno found Metadier's letter of authority on his corpse, took Metadier's body home, disguised himself as Metadier, put the body in his safe, assumed Metadier's identity, took the money, and put it too in his safe. The upshot is that the money is now in the Vampires' possession. The police arrive and arrest Moréno.

Episode 5 – "Dead Man's Escape"

Episode 5 : Dead Man's Escape (1916)

The examining magistrate from Saint-Clement-Sur-Cher relocates to Paris and is assigned to the Vampire case and the Moréno affair. After being summoned to the magistrate, Moréno commits suicide using a concealed cyanide capsule. His body is left in his cell, but during the night he wakes up, very much alive. He kills the night-watchman and takes his clothes, escaping from the prison. He is noticed by Mazamette, who is suffering from insomnia. The following morning, Moréno is found to have escaped. While writing an account of the events, Philippe is pulled out of his window by the Vampires and whisked into a large costume box. He is driven away and the box is unloaded, but incompetently, and it slides down a large flight of stairs. The Vampires retreat and Philippe is let out by two bystanders. He visits the costume designer Pugenc whose name and box number (13) are on the costume box, just missing Moréno and his gang who have bought police uniforms for a scheme of their own. Philippe learns from Pugenc that the costume box was to go to Baron de Mortesalgues on Maillot Avenue, and realizes that "Mortesalgues" must be another alias of the Grand Vampire. Later, Moréno confronts Philippe in a café, but when Philippe calls for the nearby policemen, they turn out to be part of Moréno's gang and he is again captured. Meanwhile, Mazamette breaks into Moréno's hideout. Philippe is taken there to be hanged by the gang, unless he can give them means to revenge themselves against the Vampires. He tells them that Baron de Mortesalgues is the Grand Vampire, and they spare him, tying him up. Mazamette appears and frees him. That evening, the Grand Vampire, in disguise as Baron de Mortesalgues, holds a party for his "niece", who is Irma Vep in disguise. The party attracts many members of the Parisian aristocracy. "Mortesalgues" reveals that at midnight there will be a surprise; but the "surprise" is a sleeping-gas attack on the guests. The Vampires steal all of the guests' valuables while they are unconscious. The Vampires flee with the stolen items on the top of their car, but Moréno, forewarned by Philippe, robs the Vampires and sends Philippe a letter telling him that, for the moment, they are even. Mazamette visits Philippe; he is angry with their lack of progress and wants to quit. Philippe opens a book of La Fontaine's Fables and points to the line, "in all things, one must take the end into account", and Mazamette's resolve is renewed.

Episode 6 – "Hypnotic Eyes"

Episode 6 : Hypnotic Eyes (1916)
Juan-José Moréno (Fernand Herrmann) confronts Irma Vep in "Hypnotic Eyes".

Fifteen days have passed since the events at Maillot. Moréno is looking for clues to lead him to the Vampires, and reads in a paper that a Fontainebleau notary has been murdered by them; as he happens to possess a gaze with a terrible hypnotic power, he takes control of his new maid, Laura, to turn her into his slave. Meanwhile, Philippe and Mazamette happen to see a newsreel on the murder inquest, in which they spot Irma Vep and the Grand Vampire. They cycle to Fontainebleau to investigate. En route they spot an American tourist, Horatio Werner, riding fast into the forest, and follow him. He places a box under one of the boulders, and they take it. The Grand Vampire, who is staying in the Royal Hunt Hotel under the pseudonym of Count Kerlor, along with Irma in disguise as his son, Viscount Guy, reads in a paper that George Baldwin (Émile Keppens), an American millionaire, has been robbed of $200,000. Whoever can capture the criminal, Raphael Norton, who has fled to Europe with the actress Ethel Florid, will be awarded the unspent balance of the loot. "Kerlor" notices that Mr and Mrs. Werner, who are staying at the hotel, are distressed by this notice, and concludes that Mr. Werner is Raphael Norton. Philippe and Mazamette arrive at the hotel and find that the Vampires are based there. In a different hotel they force open the box and find Baldwin's stolen money inside. Moréno comes to the Royal Hunt in disguise. While the Grand Vampire tells the hotel guests a story, Irma breaks into the Werners' suite, finding a map leading to the box in the forest. When she leaves, she is captured and chloroformed by Moréno, who takes the map. While his gang take Irma away, he dresses his hypnotized maid, Laura, as Irma and tells her to give the Vampires the map. Once one of the Vampires (Miss Édith) follows the map to get the treasure, Moréno's gang ambushes her, only to find that Philippe has already taken it. Moreno demands that the Grand Vampire ransom Irma Vep. In the early morning, the police raid the hotel and find that Werner is actually Norton, so Philippe and Mazamette win the money. Moréno falls in love with Irma and decides not to return her to the Grand Vampire. Instead, he hypnotizes her and causes her to write a confession of her involvement in the murders of the Fontainbleau notary (in this episode), Metadier (episode 4), the ballerina Marfa Koutiloff (episode 2), and Dr. Nox (episode 1). The Grand Vampire comes to meet Moréno, but Moréno by hypnotic command compels Irma to kill him. The episode ends with the now-wealthy Mazamette informing a dozen adoring journalists that "although vice is seldom punished, virtue is always rewarded".

Episode 7 – "Satanas"

Episode 7 : Satanas (1916)
Irma Vep and Juan-José Moréno in the "Happy Shack" cabaret in "Satanas"

A mysterious man (Louis Leubas) arrives at Moréno's home, and shows that he knows that the Grand Vampire's body is inside a trunk. Moréno tries to get rid of him, but he is paralysed by a pin in the man's glove. The man reveals himself to be the true Grand Vampire, Satanas, and that the first was a subordinate. While at a cabaret called the "Happy Shack", Moréno and Irma receive a note from Satanas saying they will see proof of his power at two o'clock. At two he fires a powerful cannon at the "Happy Shack", largely destroying it. Meanwhile, Philippe decides to visit Mazamette, but he is out "chasing the girls." He hides as Mazamette arrives home, drunk, with two women and a friend, who he later chases out angrily at gunpoint. The next morning, Irma and Moréno go to Satanas’ home to surrender, and Satanas offers them the chance to work with him, informing them that American millionaire George Baldwin is stopping at the Park Hotel. Satanas wants Baldwin's signature. One of Moréno's accomplices, Lily Flower (Suzanne Delvé), goes to the Park Hotel and poses as an interviewer from "Modern Woman" magazine and through trickery gets Baldwin to sign a blank piece of paper. Afterwards, Irma enters and dupes Baldwin into recording his voice saying "Parisian women are the most charming I've ever seen, all right!" Lily Flower brings Baldwin's signature to Moréno's home, and Moréno writes out an order (over Baldwin's signature) to pay Lily Flower $100,000. Moréno's gang seize the hotel telephone operator of Baldwin's hotel; Irma takes her place by using a forged note. When the bank cashier calls Baldwin to confirm that he has given a very large draft to an attractive Parisian woman, Irma intercepts the call, and plays the recording she made of Baldwin's voice, and the cashier is persuaded. While Lily Flower is taking the money, Mazamette comes in, recognising her as his old squeeze from the "Happy Shack", and follows her, seeing her hand the money to a man in a taxi – Moréno! Moréno gives Satanas the money, but he is given it back as a present. Philippe and Mazamette capture Lily Flower at her home and make her call Moréno and tell him to come, but when he and Irma arrive they fall into a trap and are caught by the police.

Episode 8 – "The Thunder Master"

Episode 8 : The Thunder Master (1916)
Oscar-Cloud Mazamette (Marcel Lévesque) dressed as a rag-picker in "The Thunder Master"
Satanas (Louis Leubas) assembles a bomb in "The Thunder Master".

Irma, sentenced to life imprisonment, has been sent to St. Lazarus’ prison. A transfer order is sent to the prison to send Irma to a penal colony in Algeria. On the day of her departure, Irma finds out that Moréno has been executed. Satanas follows Irma's transportation route, stopping at a seaside hotel in disguise as a priest. At the port, he gives some religious comfort to the prisoners, but Irma's copy contains a secret message saying "the ship will blow up" and giving her directions on how to safeguard herself. Satanas destroys the ship with his cannon. Meanwhile, Philippe finds through the red codebook that the explosive shell that landed on the "Happy Shack" came from Montmartre, and Mazamette goes to investigate. His son, Eustache Mazamette (René Poyen), is sent home from school for bad behaviour, so they go to "investigate" together. They find some men loading boxes into a house, and notice one of the top hat cases contains a shell. Later, reading that no survivors have been found from the exploding ship, Satanas visits Philippe to avenge Irma's death. Satanas paralyses Phillipe with the poisoned pin in his glove and leaves a bomb in a top hat to kill him off. Mazamette arrives and throws the top hat out the window just in time. At Satanas’ home, Eustache is used as a ploy to hide Mazamette in a box, but Satanas sees this through a spy-hole. Satanas threatens Eustache, but Eustache shoots at Satanas, and the police raid the building and arrest him. After the action, they find that Mazamette's nose has been broken by Eustache's shot. Meanwhile, Irma is shown to have survived the blast on the ship, and is on her way back to Paris as a stowaway under a train. She is helped by the station staff and police, pretending that she is in "one of those eternal love stories beloved by popular imagination." She makes her way to the Vampire hangout, the "Howling Cat" nightclub, where she performs, and is rapturously greeted by the Vampires. Upon hearing of the arrest of Satanas, one of the Vampires, Venomous (Frederik Moriss), appoints himself the new chief. By Satanas’ orders, they mail him an envelope containing a poisoned note, which he eats to commit suicide.

Episode 9 – "The Poisoner"

Episode 9 : The Poisoner (1916)
Venomous (Frederik Moriss) plotting against Philippe in "The Poisoner"
Irma Vep waiting for rescue in "The Poisoner"

Irma is now a devoted collaborator of Venomous, who is set on getting rid of Philippe and Mazamette. He learns that Philippe is engaged to Jane Bremontier (Louise Lagrange), and the following day Irma and Lily Flower rent an apartment above hers. Irma's maid, a Vampire also, hears that Philippe and Jane's engagement party will be catered for by the famous Béchamel House. Venomous cancels their catering order, and on the day of the party the Vampires appear instead. Jane's mother (Jeanne Marie-Laurent) gives the concierges one bottle of the Vampires' champagne as a present, and just as dinner is served the male concierge, Leon Charlet, drinks it, is poisoned and dies. His wife stops the party guests from drinking their champagne just in time, and the Vampires make a hasty escape. A few days later, Mazamette and Philippe's mother pick up Jane and her mother in the night in order to take them to a safe retreat near Fontainebleau. Irma, who tries to fill the getaway car with soporific gas, is spotted by Mazamette, but Irma gasses him, and he is taken away asleep while Irma hides in a box on the car. Mazamette is dumped on the street and taken to the police station, believed to be drunk. When he wakens, he calls Philippe to warn him, but Irma slips out of the box and gets away in the car before Philippe can catch her. Irma jumps off the car near the Pyramid Hotel, and calls Venomous to meet her there, but Philippe has also arranged to meet Mazamette there. Philippe spots Irma at the Pyramid Hotel, captures her and ties her up. Philippe and Mazamette leave Irma in Mazamette's car and attempt to ambush Venomous, but Irma honks the car horn to warn him. Venomous saves Irma and drives off in Mazamette's car, so Philippe and Mazamette chase him in his. Venomous leaps off; Philippe chases Venomous on foot, following him onto the top of a moving train, but Venomous gets away. Mazamette, enraged at the police for not letting him help Philippe on the train, hits one of the officers, who arrest him. At the police station, Philippe and Mazamette carry on so dramatically that the police decide not to book Mazamette, who is after all a famous philanthropist. But the Vampires are still on the loose.

Episode 10 – "The Terrible Wedding"

Episode 10 : The Terrible Wedding (1916)

A few months have passed, and Philippe and Jane are now married. Augustine Charlet (Germaine Rouer), widow of the poisoned concierge, is hired by the Guérandes to be their chamber maid. Augustine, still tormented by the mysterious poisoning death of her husband, receives an advertising circular for a psychic, Madame d’Alba of 13 Avenue Junot, and decides to consult her. Madame d’Alba, a Vampire, hypnotises Augustine and instructs her to unlock the door of Philippe's apartment at 2 am. Mazamette, who has taken an attraction to Augustine, awakens that night and sees her descend the stairs to unlock the door. The Vampires enter, tie her up, and feed poisonous gas into the Guérandes’ room. Mazamette shoots at them and they flee, and Augustine explains her actions. As they go to the police, Venomous tries to break in through a bedroom window, but Jane shoots at him. When she looks out the window she is lassoed down and carried away. At daybreak, the police raid Avenue Junot; however Irma and Venomous escape through the roof and a bomb is left behind. Augustine is recaptured by the Vampires during their escape. Mazamette shoots at the getaway car, causing an oil leak. Philippe follows the trail to the Vampires’ lair and discovers Augustine and Jane, to whom he passes a gun before leaving. Returning at night, he sets up an escape during the celebration of Irma's marriage to Venomous. At daybreak, the police prepare for a massive raid as the party continues. The police burst in and a running gun battle ensues, ending when the remaining Vampires (save Irma) are driven out onto the balcony which Philippe earlier rigged and are killed in the fall. Irma prepares to kill Jane and Augustine, but Jane shoots her dead. A few days later Mazamette makes a proposal of marriage to Augustine, which she accepts. The film ends with the two couples (Philippe and Jane, and Mazamette and Augustine) standing side by side.

Cast

Production

The Forest of Fontainebleau was chosen as a filming location.

Development and writing

The genre of crime serial was popular and prolific at the time, and Feuillade had had a big success with his previous work, the serial Fantômas.[8] It is suspected that production of Les Vampires started when Gaumont learned that rival company Pathé had acquired the rights to release the serial The Mysteries of New York,[8] known in America as The Exploits of Elaine,[9] and felt they had to fend off competition. Another American serial, The Perils of Pauline, had become massively popular since the release of Fantômas.[10]

The idea of the criminal gang was possibly inspired by the Bonnot Gang, a highly advanced anarchist group who had a high-profile crime spree in Paris during 1911–1912.[4] Feuillade wrote the script himself, but did it in a very simplistic way, usually writing the premise and relying on the actors to fill in the details. Later episodes were more scripted, however.[11] It is also inconsistent at points; for example, in "Satanas" Moréno orders one of his accomplices to search Mazamette's apartment, but the incident is never heard of or mentioned again. The style has been compared to that of a pulp magazine (which it was later serialized as.) In an essay on the film, Fabrice Zagury stated "...Feuillade's narrative seldom originates from principles of cause and effect... Rather it unwinds following labyrinthine and spiral-shaped paths."[9] None of the episodes employ the cliffhanger mechanic,[12] popularised by The Perils of Pauline. The cast chosen were mostly new to Feuillade, the only recurring actors from Fantômas being extras.[citation needed]

Filming and editing

The film was mostly shot on location in Paris, and is said to have been strenuous, some actors having to leave due to the wartime efforts.[3] It was shot inexpensively, evidenced by the utilization of painted flats for doors and re-use of furniture in the film's sets[13] and its reliance on stock footage for more elaborate shots such as a ferry exploding in "The Thunder Master". The episodes were also produced very quickly; estimations have been made that there would have been a three- to four-month period between the filming of an episode and the release.[14] Feuillade makes little use of popular cinematic techniques, most of the film consisting of long takes with stationary cameras with the occasional use of a close up to show plot details such as photos or letters. This was done to give the film a more "real look".[3] Due to a lack of scripting by Feuillade many of the scenes were improvised on the days of shooting.[8] Musidora, a former acrobat, did all her own stunts.[1] Work on the film was done at the same time as of his later serial Judex.[9]

The film employs tinting to describe the lighting: amber for daylight interiors, green for daylight exteriors, blue for night and dark scenes and lavender for low-lit areas (such as nightclubs or dawn). It is noted for its length, just under 400 minutes, and is considered one of the longest films ever made.[1] At the time of its release it was the second longest film ever made, behind the 1914 Christian film The Photo-Drama of Creation (480 mins.)[15]

Release

The frontispiece of the novelization of the episode "The Thunder Master", depicting Oscar-Cloud Mazamette with a broken nose

Les Vampires was serialised in French cinemas as ten episodes of differing length, the first two appearing on 13 November 1915 and the last on 30 June 1916.[1] The film was first shown in Mexico on 24 May 1917 and has an American release at approximately the same time. The rediscovered film made its début in the US at the 1965 New York Film Festival.[1]

Despite World War I limiting the audience for the film (unlike Feuillade's earlier work Fantômas) it was a huge success in France, massively outshining the original competition from Pathé and the serial The Mysteries of New York.[8] Much of the film's success is said to have been from the inclusion of Musidora as the antagonist Irma Vep, who fit well with the archetypes of "vamp" and "femme fatale",[16] often being compared to Theda Bara.[17] The police force, however, condemned the series for its apparent glorification of crime and dubious morality.[8] Some of the episodes were temporarily banned,[18] but these bans were retracted after a personal appeal from Musidora.[19]

A 7-volume novelization of Les Vampires by Feuillade and George Meirs was published in 1916 by Tallandier (as 4 paperbacks followed by 3 magazine-size issues).[4]

Promotion

Early advertising for Les Vampires was done mysteriously; in November 1915, the walls of Paris were plastered with street posters that depicted three masked faces with a question mark as a noose, and the questions "Qui? Quoi? Quand? Où…?" ("Who? What? When? Where…?") to advertise the first two episodes (released on the same day). Subsequent posters were made for the later episodes. The morning newspapers printed the following poem:

Des nuits sans lune ils sont les Rois, les ténèbres sont leur empire. Portant la mort, semant l'effroi. Voici le vol noir des Vampires. Gorgés de sang, visqueux et lourds. Ils vont, les sinistres Vampires aux grandes ailes de velours non pas vers le Mal... Vers le Pire![20]

English Translation:

Of the moonless nights they are kings, darkness is their kingdom. Carrying death and sowing terror, the dark Vampires fly with great suede wings, ready not only to do evil... but to do even worse![21]

Home media

On 16 May 2000, the film was released on DVD in the US by Image Entertainment on two discs, with music by Robert Israel. Additional features to this version are the short films For the Children (a wartime fundraiser starring the cast of Les Vampires) and Bout de Zan and the Shirker (a comedy featuring René Poyen), as well as a supplementary essay on the film "The Public Is My Master" by Fabrice Zagury. Gaumont released a special French restored edition on 22 March 2006. Containing 4 discs, it also includes a documentary on Feuillade titled Louis Feuillade at Work, a featurette on the serial's restoration and a 32-page booklet. On 24 March 2008 Artificial Eye released a 3 disc UK edition, which includes five short films and a new musical accompaniment by Éric le Guen. On 14 August 2012 a Blu-ray Disc version was released by Kino International on two discs, remastered from the Cinémathèque Française 35mm film restoration, with a musical score by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra and a trailer for Fantômas.[13][22]

Critical reception

Musidora in a publicity still for Les Vampires, wearing her iconic black bodysuit. Her performance as Irma Vep has been singled out for praise by critics.

Contemporary

Les Vampires, like other Feuillade crime serials, was generally despised by critics of the time. A reviewer for the magazine Hebdo-Film said: "That a man of talent, an artist, as the director of most of the great films which have been the success and glory of Gaumont, starts again to deal with this unhealthy genre [the crime film], obsolete and condemned by all people of taste, remains for me a real problem."[3] Vilified by those who wished to elevate the cultural status of film in France,[23] the film was criticised for being "old-fashioned and inartistic",[3] lacking the artistry of films such as The Birth of a Nation by D. W. Griffith, also first released in 1915. Feuillade, conscious of his film's lack of appeal to critics, once said "A film is not a sermon nor a conference, even less a rebus, but a means to entertain the eyes and the spirit."[24] However, it did receive some underground praise, French poets André Breton and Louis Aragon calling it "the reality of this century. Beyond fashion. Beyond taste."[10]

Re-evaluation

Since its original release, some critics, among them Richard Abel, Noel Burch, Francis Lacassin, Annette Michelson, and Richard Roud, have re-interpreted the film.[3] It is now arguably Feuillade's most famous work, and his most critically revered. Rotten Tomatoes reports 100% approval among 14 critics.[25] While Mathé and Lévesque as the leads have been called pallid and hammy respectively, many critics have praised Musidora for her performance, being described as acting with "voluptuous vitality".[7] In 1987 film critic Jonathan Rosenbaum called it "one of the supreme delights of film."[26] In 2003, Slant Magazine gave it four stars, calling it "remarkably attuned to the morality of the time" and "exhilarating".[24] It also noted "...its Machiavellan reflection of a complacent bourgeois order on the brink of collapse makes this realist master-work".[24] In a later review, for the 2012 Blu-ray Disc version, the magazine gave further praise to the film, commenting on the film's stripped down, proto-thriller execution, giving it a highly modern nature, as well as its surreal disorder, stating that at times "the film's fidelity to realism seems to halt in mid-somersault, with blood rushing to its brain."[22] Time Out gave the film 5 stars, but did note that "if shown, as it often is, in one great unnatural marathon, it can be sheer torture."[27]

Glenn Erickson of DVD Savant gave a highly positive review, highlighting its graphic approach to sensuality and violence.[28] Jamie S. Rich of DVD Talk also gave a positive review, summarizing that "Les Vampires is a real treat. It's pulp fiction brought to life on a cinema screen, [with] over six hours of colorful criminals, wooden do-gooders, and outrageous acts of malice and evil." He also added, however, that the length of the film and out-dated aesthetics are the film's downfall.[29] Josh Hurtado of Twitch Film called it a "six and a half hour joyride of thrilling cinema,"[30] while Sean Axmaker, writing for Turner Classic Movies called it "a strange and wonderful masterpiece of elegant beauty and cinematic surprises."[31] Rianne Hill Soriano of Yahoo! Movies said that "for its historical and cinematic contexts as one of the most instrumental works in the evolution of filmmaking both as an art form and an industry, Les Vampires is a valuable addition to a cinephile's movie collection."[32]

Accolades

In 2002, the film came out joint 30th on the Sight and Sound 'Critics' Top Ten Poll' and 78th on The Village Voice's '250 Best Films of the 20th Century' list.[33] In 2010, The Guardian named it the 25th 'Greatest Horror Film of All Time.[34] It is included in the books AFI Desk Reference, National Society of Film Critics' 100 Essential Films, 1000 Essential Films, The Village Voice Film Guide[33] and 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die.[7]

Aftermath

A modern tribute to Musidora and the film on a Belgian SNCB train by a street artist.

Musidora saw a noticeable raise in her public profile after the film's release, becoming a star of French cinema. She was able to concentrate her career on directing and writing her own films. Édouard Mathé and Marcel Lévesque enjoyed lengthy film careers as a result of their performances.[35] The three leads, as well as many other cast members, were re-cast by Feuillade to appear in his other serials such as Judex, Tih Minh, Barrabas and Parisette.

Legacy

The film is said to have established the genre of crime thriller, creating cinematic thriller techniques used later by Alfred Hitchcock and Fritz Lang.[5] The use of gadgetry such as canons and bombs was also adopted by Lang in films such as Dr. Mabuse the Gambler and The Spiders.[11] It is also said to have inspired experimental filmmakers such as Luis Buñuel and French New Wave directors such as Alain Resnais and Georges Franju.[8] Some have called it an early example of a gangster film.[18]

Olivier Assayas' 1996 movie Irma Vep, with a story line of a director's attempt to remake Les Vampires, is both an homage to the innovative nature of the original film and a critique of the then current state of French cinema. The play The Mystery of Irma Vep is also inspired by the film, as is the Brazilian adaptation Irma Vep – She's Back![36]

Les Vampires is referenced in the 1974 French film Celine and Julie Go Boating, where the title characters dress in costumes resembling Irma Vep's black bodysuit, and the 2009 war film Inglourious Basterds, where advertising posters can be seen in an office.[1] The début self-titled album by American punk group Black Lips features an image of Irma Vep as the album cover. French electronic music duo Château Flight released a soundtrack to the film in 2006.[37]

In Kim Newman's Moriarty: The Hound of the D'Urbervilles story collection, Professor Moriarty is portrayed as dealing with Les Vampires several times. He provides them with a skull purported to be that of Napoleon Bonaparte, intended for use as a drinking vessel.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Les Vampires at IMDb
  2. ^ "Les Vampires 9: The Poisoner 1916". The Devil's Manor. Retrieved 2012-07-18.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "The Innovators 1910–1920: Detailing The Impossible". Sight and Sound. April 1999. Archived from the original on 2015-04-17. Retrieved 2012-05-18.
  4. ^ a b c "Les Vampires, Musidora and the Vamp World of the Forgotten Original Goths". 2007. Retrieved 2012-05-18.
  5. ^ a b "Les Vampires (Serial)". MTV. Retrieved 2012-05-18.
  6. ^ "Vintage Powder Room – "Fair Sex"". 20 Mar 2011. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  7. ^ a b c Schneider, Stephen Jay (April 10, 2010). 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die. Octopus Publishing Group, London. pp. 26–27. ISBN 9781844036905. Retrieved 2012-09-23.
  8. ^ a b c d e f "Les Vampires (1915) – Film Review". Films De France. 2002. Retrieved 2012-05-18.
  9. ^ a b c "Les Vampires 6: The Eyes That Fascinate 1916". The Devil's Manor. Retrieved 2012-07-18.
  10. ^ a b "LES VAMPIRES". Film Reference. Retrieved 2012-07-11.
  11. ^ a b "Les Vampires 7: Satanas 1916". The Devil's Manor. Retrieved 2012-07-18.
  12. ^ Rubin, Martin. 1999. Thrillers. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 55. ISBN 0521581834.
  13. ^ a b "Les Vampires (1915–1916)". Silent Era. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  14. ^ "Les Vampires 8: The Thunder Master 1916". The Devil's Manor. Retrieved 2012-07-19.
  15. ^ The Photo-Drama of Creation at IMDb
  16. ^ "The French World Newton Universe – Les Vampires". Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  17. ^ "Les Vampires 3: The Red Cryptogram 1915". The Devil's Manor. Retrieved 2012-07-18.
  18. ^ a b "Les Vampires". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2012-05-18.
  19. ^ "Les Vampires 4: The Spectre 1916". The Devil's Manor. Retrieved 2012-07-18.
  20. ^ Patrice Gauthier, Francis Lacassin: Louis Feuillade : Maître du cinéma populaire, collection « Découvertes Gallimard / Arts » (nº 486). Paris: Gallimard 2006, S. 68.
  21. ^ Werner Faulstich, Helmut Korte (Compiladores): Cien Años de Cine 1895–1924, Siglo XXI, México 2006
  22. ^ a b "Movie Review – Les Vampires (2012)". Slant. 2012-08-16. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  23. ^ "Sequels, Series, and Remakes – Serials". Film reference. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  24. ^ a b c "Movie Review – Les Vampires". Slant. 2003-05-09. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  25. ^ "Les Vampires (1915)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  26. ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan (1987-10-09). "Featured Texts – Les Vampires". Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  27. ^ "Les Vampires (1915) Movie review From Time Out Film Guide". Time Out. Archived from the original on 2007-07-11. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  28. ^ Erickson, Glenn (2012-09-16). "Les Vampires Savant Blu-ray Review". DVD Savant. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  29. ^ Rich, Jamie (2012-09-19). "Blu-ray Reviews – Les Vampires: 2-Disc Kino Classics Edition (Blu-ray)". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  30. ^ Hurtado, Josh (2012-08-12). "Blu-ray Review: LES VAMPIRES Still Knocks 'Em Dead". Twitch Film. Archived from the original on 2012-10-17. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  31. ^ Axmaker, Sean. "Louis Feuillade's LES VAMPIRES – Restored by the Cinematheque Francaise". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  32. ^ Hill Soriano, Rianne (2012-08-16). "Blu-ray Review: 'Les Vampires'". Yahoo! Movies. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  33. ^ a b "Les Vampires". Films101. Retrieved 2012-05-19.
  34. ^ "The 25 best horror films of all time: the full list". The Guardian. 22 October 2010. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  35. ^ "Les Vampires (Part 10: Les Noces Sanglantes): conclusion to an intelligent action-thriller serial". Under Southern Eyes. Retrieved 2012-07-18.
  36. ^ "Les Vampires 10: The Bloody Wedding 1916". The Devil's Manor. Retrieved 2012-07-19.
  37. ^ "Château Flight – Les Vampires at Discogs". Retrieved 2012-10-23.