Fantômas, a fictional master criminal, is the subject of a series of early-20th century French detective thrillers. He is a master of disguise, always appearing under an assumed identity, often that of a person he has murdered. He is pursued in the novels by Inspector Juve, a police detective obsessed with his capture, and Jérôme Fandor, a journalist whose father Fantômas murdered and impersonated. Fantômas is assisted, sometimes reluctantly, by his lover Lady Beltham, an English noblewoman whose husband was another of Fantômas's victims. Fantômas makes use of bizarre and improbable techniques in his crimes, such as plague-infested rats, giant snakes, and rooms that fill with sand.
During the series Fantômas is given as the father of at least three children:
- Hélène, illegitimate daughter by an unnamed mother. She posed as the daughter of the Emperor of India, who at the time of the novels was actually George V of the United Kingdom. She reluctantly helped her father on a number of cases and occasionally posed as the lover/wife of her brother or half-brother Prince Vladimir. She eventually fell in love with Jerôme Fandor and they married in volume 25 of the series. In later volumes her husband was suspected of also being her half-brother.
- Jérôme Fandor, actual name Charles Rambert. He believed himself to be the son of the deceased Etienne and Madeline Rambert. In Volume 26 of the series, however, Etienne was discovered alive, hiding in the Netherlands. He expressed his belief that Jérôme was actually the result of his wife's affair with another man. The latter was suspected to be Fantômas, who was also by that time Jérôme's father-in-law and worst enemy.
- Prince Vladimir, another illegitimate son. Like his father he is a villain with sadistic and homicidal tendencies. He enthusiastically assisted his father on several occasions and also posed as the lover/husband of his sister or half-sister Hélène. Whether they actually shared a sexual relationship was left uncertain.
In 1926, Marcel Allain published five more Fantômas adventures written by himself alone, Souvestre having died in February of 1914. Between 1933 and 1938, he published three more Fantômas adventures as newspaper serials, which never appeared as books. None of these later works have ever been published in English.
The silent film pioneer Louis Feuillade directed five films based on the Fantômas series, appearing in 1913-1914. They are regarded as masterpieces of silent film and are often considered to be superior to the novels themselves. His later serial Les Vampires, which concerns a mysterious crime syndicate known as "The Vampires," is reminiscent of the Fantômas series in many respects, and generally considered superior to the earlier films. Both sets of films have been released on video. A number of subsequent series of Fantômas films have been made, including one series starring Louis de Funes.
The Fantômas novels and the subsequent films were highly regarded by the French avant-garde of the day, particularly by the surrealists. Blaise Cendrars called the series "the modern Aeneid; Guillaume Apollinaire said that "from the imaginative standpoint Fantômas is one of the richest works that exist." The painter René Magritte and the surrealist poet and novelist Robert Desnos both produced works alluding to the novels or the subsequent films.
The band Fantômas was formed in 1997 of an Alternative Metal and a Grunge Music band
founded with the Melvins' Buzz Osbourne, two members of Faith No More/Mr. Bungle
(Mike Patton and Trevor Dunn), and Slayer's Dave Lombardo.
External links
Year | Title | Label |
1999 | Fantômas | Ipecac Records |
2001 | The Director's Cut | Ipecac Records |