English (en-US)

Name

Georges Franju

Biography

Georges Franju was a French filmmaker. He was born in Fougères, Ille-et-Vilaine. Before working in French cinema, Franju had several different jobs. Franju was also briefly in the military in Algeria and was discharged in 1932. On his return, Franju studied to become a set designer and later created backdrops for music halls including Casino de Paris and the Folles Bergère.

In the mid-thirties, Franju and Henri Langlois met through Franju's twin brother Jacques Franju. As well as creating the 16 mm short film Le Métro, Langlois and Franju also started a short-lived film magazine and created a film club called Le Cercle du Cinema with 500 francs he borrowed from Langlois' parents. The club showed silent films from their own collections followed by an informal debate about them amongst members. From Le Cercle du Cinema, Franju and Langlois founded the Cinématheque Française in 1936.

Franju ceased to be closely related with the Cinématheque Française as early as 1938, and only became associated with it strongly again in the 1980s when he was appointed as the honorary artistic director of the Cinématheque.

In 1949, Franju began work on a series of nine documentary films. The Nazi occupation of Paris and the industrialism following World War II influenced Franju's early works. With Head Against the Wall (French:La tête contre les murs) in 1958, Franju turned toward fiction feature films. His second feature was the horror film Eyes Without a Face (French:Les Yeux sans Visage) about a surgeon who tries to repair his daughter's ruined face by grafting on to it the faces of beautiful women. His 1963 film Judex was a tribute to the silent film serials Judex and Fantomas. In Franju's later years his film work became less frequent. Franju occasionally directed for television and in the late seventies he retired from filmmaking to preside over the Cinématheque Française. In her study of French cinema since the French new wave, Claire Clouzot described Franju's film style as "a poignant fantastic realism inherited from surrealism and Jean Painlevé science cinema, and influenced by the expressionism of Lang and Murnau". Franju's focus was on the visual aspect of filmmaking, which he claimed marked a director as an auteur. Franju claimed to "not have the story writing gift" and was focused on what he described as the "putting into form" of the film.

Franju was also extremely influenced by surrealism. He used elements of surrealism and shock horror within his films in order to “awaken” his audience. Franju had a long history of friendship with well-known surrealists including Andre Breton, and the influence of this movement is extremely evident in his works. Franju uses these elements to link horror, history, and an ironic commentary on modernity’s ideal of progress. Franju is quoted as having said “It’s the bad combination, it’s the wrong synthesis, constantly being made by the eye as it looks around, that stops us from seeing everything as strange.”

Description above from the Wikipedia article Georges Franju , licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

French (fr-FR)

Name
Biography

Georges Franju est un réalisateur français, né le 12 avril 1912 à Fougères et mort le 5 novembre 1987 à Paris 16e.

Né en 1912, il exerce différents métiers dont décorateur de théâtre, mais surtout rencontre en 1934 Henri Langlois, passionné de cinéma comme lui. Ils réalisent ensemble un court-métrage, Le Métro, sorti en 1935. Puis il participe en 1936, toujours avec Langlois, à la création de la Cinémathèque française, bénéficiant du soutien de Paul-Auguste Harlé. Il devient en 1938 secrétaire exécutif de la Fédération internationale des archives du film (FIAF).

Après la Seconde Guerre mondiale, Georges Franju se fait connaître avec des courts métrages documentaires, d'un réalisme sans concession, mais avec de courts passages surréalistes et poétiques, comme Le Sang des bêtes sur le monde des abattoirs mais avec des images d'une péniche qui semble glisser sur la terre ferme, En passant par la Lorraine sur les aciéries mosellanes, ou encore Hôtel des Invalides sur les «gueules cassées», comprenant aussi des images d'une armée d'armures vides, etc. De 1945 à 1953, il est aussi secrétaire général d'un Institut de cinématographie scientifique, créé par Jean Painlevé.

On retrouve ce style de mise en scène froid et cette poésie un peu fantastique dans ses longs métrages comme La Tête contre les murs (interprété par Jean-Pierre Mocky, auteur du scénario), qui se déroule dans un asile psychiatrique, ou son chef-d'œuvre Les Yeux sans visage, authentique film d'horreur dont certaines scènes annoncent le cinéma gore (qui apparaîtra trois ans plus tard avec Orgie sanglante de Herschell Gordon Lewis), mais sans son versant grand-guignol. George A. Romero s'inspirera d'ailleurs de cette œuvre pour son film Bruiser, avec le masque blanc neutre comme dans celui de Franju.

Dans Judex tourné en 1963 avec Edith Scob et Francine Bergé, il affiche son penchant pour l'insolite et affirme son goût d'une mise en scène expressionniste.

En 1965, par l'intermédiaire de l'éditeur et ancien repris de justice Georges Figon, il rencontre le journaliste Philippe Bernier, qui travaille sur un projet de film documentaire consacré à la décolonisation. C'est dans ces circonstances qu'il est impliqué malgré lui dans l'affaire Ben Barka.

Il adapte aussi Thérèse Desqueyroux de François Mauriac (1962) et La Faute de l'abbé Mouret d'Émile Zola(1970).

Mort à 75 ans le 5 novembre 1987, il est inhumé à Dourdan (Essonne).

Source: Article "Georges Franju" de Wikipédia en français, soumis à la licence CC-BY-SA 3.0.

French (fr-CA)

Name

Georges Franju

Biography

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