
Movie spotlight
Fantasmagorie
In 1743, in the French countryside, a strange epidemic deserted the region. 200 years later, a young woman wakes curiously languid after a restless night. Her husband received a letter a few hours later asking him to go to a remote place for business, where he would have to spend the night. If he succeeds in reassuring his young wife, who has a presentiment of being separated for the first time from him, the first night spent in his host's house will topple everything.
Insights
Plot Summary
A young woman, the daughter of a wealthy industrialist, is subjected to a series of disfiguring facial surgeries performed by her father's associate, a brilliant surgeon. The procedures are intended to make her unrecognizable to her guilt-ridden father, who is responsible for her mother's death. As she undergoes these transformations, she grapples with her identity and seeks revenge.
Critical Reception
Georges Franju's 'Fantasmagorie' is a chilling and visually striking horror film that explores themes of identity, guilt, and revenge. It was met with mixed to positive reviews, appreciated for its atmospheric tension and surreal imagery, though some found its narrative complex and its horror elements subdued.
What Reviewers Say
Praised for its unsettling atmosphere and striking visuals.
Noted for its exploration of psychological horror and identity.
Some critics found the plot convoluted but admired its artistic ambition.
Google audience: Audience reception for 'Fantasmagorie' is not widely documented on Google, but historical critical reviews highlight its unique artistic vision and unsettling mood.
Fun Fact
The film's distinctive visual style and thematic concerns align with the broader trends of French horror and surrealism in cinema during the 1960s, particularly Franju's own earlier work like 'Eyes Without a Face'.
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