(1964) — Fantomas
While fans of the original silent films by Louis Feuillade might miss the gritty darkness, Hunebelle's version is a pure "pop-art" joy. It’s a film that exists between worlds: part crime pulp, part Bond-ian spy adventure, and part slapstick comedy. Key Details at a Glance André Hunebelle
What makes the 1964 Fantômas a cult classic is the chemistry of its stars. pulls double duty as both the heroic Fandor and the menacing Fantômas, showcasing his range as a physical actor who performed many of his own stunts. Meanwhile, Louis de Funès provides the comedic soul of the film, his high-energy "bungling blowhard" performance turning what could have been a standard thriller into a laugh-out-loud caper.
Enter our two protagonists—or rather, the two men Fantômas loves to torment: Fantomas (1964)
A cocky journalist who mocks the police for failing to catch the criminal. He goes so far as to publish a fake interview with Fantômas, complete with a staged photo.
In this 1964 incarnation, Fantômas trades his traditional top hat for a sleek, that gives him an eerie, artificial look. He is no longer just a common criminal; he is a scientific genius with a "Batcave-ish" lair and an arsenal of high-tech gadgets, including helicopters, submarines, and a car that drops oil slicks to foil pursuers. Why It Still Works While fans of the original silent films by
The Laughing Menace: Revisiting André Hunebelle's Fantômas (1964)
Long before modern franchises mastered the "action-comedy" formula, French director delivered a masterclass in genre-bending with the 1964 revival of Fantômas . By blending the dark, pulp roots of the original 1911 novels with a "swinging sixties" aesthetic, this film transformed a terrifying literary killer into a campy, tech-savvy supervillain who paved the way for the Bond-era spy craze. The Plot: A Man of a Thousand Faces pulls double duty as both the heroic Fandor
Jean Marais (Fandor/Fantômas), Louis de Funès (Juve), Mylène Demongeot (Hélène) Genre: Crime / Comedy / Adventure