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Les Vampires

Play trailer Poster for Les Vampires 1915 7h 1m Crime Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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95% Tomatometer 22 Reviews 80% Popcornmeter 1,000+ Ratings
Marcel Levesque, Jean Ayme and Musidora star in a 1915 serial about an underground criminal society.
Les Vampires

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Critics Consensus

Energetically paced and visually wondrous, Les Vampires is a raucous epic that depicts criminal mayhem with pioneering style.

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Critics Reviews

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Richard Roud Sight & Sound Les Vampires is indeed one of the cinema's supreme masterpieces. That much is certain. It is more difficult to explain why. Feb 7, 2020 Full Review Bosley Crowther New York Times A few hours of it, however, was sufficient to convince this viewer that this French opposite number to The Perils of Pauline is the ultimate in cinema camp. It is a lurid, slow-moving, grotesque stretch-out of fantastic adventures. Apr 18, 2019 Full Review Scott Tobias AV Club Even at nearly eight hours, the series has ingenuity to spare. Apr 18, 2019 Full Review Margaret I. MacDonald Moving Picture World We predict success for this serial, which Is well produced, and holds the Interest of the spectator through every inch o the film. Aug 5, 2020 Full Review George N. Shorey Motion Picture News A series of startling melodramatic pictures which should appeal strongly to the class of theatre patrons to whom mystery, murder, and Satanic schemes are meat and bread. Aug 5, 2020 Full Review Joshua Brunsting The CriterionCast Seemingly taking the technology and style of the day, and pushing it to its absolute max, there are aesthetic touches within this series that feel as vibrant as anything today. Apr 16, 2019 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Matthew B The days when serial dramas were shown at the cinema are long since over. Given the notoriety of these serials, which were the cinematic equivalent of the penny dreadful, it is surprising to come to Les Vampires, a French serial movie made in ten parts that must count as one of the earliest serials. Whatever we can say about Les Vampires, it is never dull, never formulaic, and it does not cheat the viewer. Even by the standard of 1915 to 1916, Feuillade's cinematic style was simple, and a little crude. Scenes are filmed in long takes with no camera movement. The camera is placed at a middle distance from the characters with only a few close-ups to allow the audience to read letters and notes. This may be because Feuillade made the films on the cheap. The sets are basic. The same furniture is reused in different settings. Doors are obviously painted on, although they are designed to open. Stock footage was employed. Each episode was made in haste with very little script, and no particular direction. This last point may explain the extraordinary inventiveness of Les Vampires. Feuillade and his team were making things up on the hoof, and this allowed for considerable variety in the settings, and in the action of Les Vampires. Each episode tells a separate story with no cliffhangers, and brings something fresh to the narrative. It is a testament to the fertility of the imagination of everyone involved that this did not result in a dull or muddled production where the story returned to the same tropes each week. Indeed the improvisational nature of the plot has a peculiar absurdist quality to it that makes the film seem more surrealist than was perhaps intended. Luis Buñuel claimed to have been influenced by the film, and so also were New Wave directors such as Alain Resnais and Georges Franju. Feuillade also set the scene for later thriller directors, among them Alfred Hitchcock and Fritz Lang. If modern reviewers are lukewarm about Philippe and Mazamette, there is unanimous love for the character of Irma Vep, the only Vampire who appears in most of the episodes. Strictly speaking Irma Vep's character is not much deeper than that of the other regulars. Feuillad does not devote much attention to characterisation, nor does he need to. However Musidora's performance in the role has a spirit about it that makes her a curiously appealing villain. It helps that the actress was also an acrobat who performed her own stunts. Musidora's appearance in Les Vampires proved helpful for her film career. She went on to appear in a number of films, and even directed some. Her dark eyes (she used kohl), pale skin, unusual clothes and lively acting immediately draw the viewers' attention to her. Les Vampires is superior pulp fiction. The criminals kill, sedate or threaten people with an infinite variety of methods, including bombings, shootings, stabbings, gassing, and poisoning. Paralysing darts are concealed in gloves. Bombs are hidden in hats. Victims are killed by decapitation, with poisonous ink, and with a hat pin. If the Vampires wish to intimidate Moréno, they could have used a drive-by shooting or a bomb, but if you have a cannon hidden inside your hearth, it would be a shame not to use it. Ordinary settings become menacing. There is no safety in the home, at the opera house, or while attending a social gathering with dozens of guests. A party to celebrate an engagement is broken up when the guests realise the champagne has been poisoned. This is a world of locked rooms that contain secret chambers, safes that open from the wall behind, and secret hideouts that are hidden below wells and manholes. t is marked by a number of side stories that suddenly appear for one or more episode, and which seem entirely unnecessary to the action. For example, in Part Eight, Mazamette's son is expelled from school, and the little boy is enlisted in the dangerous work of entrapping Satanas. After this episode we never see the child again. I saw that these stories are unnecessary, but they are the sauce that makes Les Vampires so tasty. Its many bizarre plot twists, far-fetched crimes, peculiar leaps in logic, and constantly changing storylines keep the thriller from ever going stale. Feuillade was probably wise to wrap up after ten parts. While the serial is entertaining until the end, there are a few signs of him repeating himself – a second mesmerist, a second lassoing from a window, a second fiancée, etc. However even the last episodes contain new ideas, and provide a satisfying conclusion to the thriller. It is said that Les Vampires was condemned at the time for glorifying crime and dubious morality. Certainly the series does revel in the antics of its eponymous gangsters, but the events in Les Vampires are so gloriously unreal that the story is more of a fantasy than a celebration of any realistic criminal activity. Feuillade shows a good grasp of pace and creates one of the most imaginative serials ever made. I wrote a longer appreciation of Les Vampires on my blog page if you would like to read more: https://themoviescreenscene.wordpress.com/2021/03/20/les-vampires-1915-16/ Rated 5 out of 5 stars 09/26/23 Full Review Alexander B This film was so long that you would be better off watching it in episodes. Most of it is really boring by today's standards but some of it is still very valuable cinema. If you love silent films watch it. Otherwise skip it. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/09/23 Full Review Chris J I enjoyed the thought beyond this film but the length hurt it a little in my opinion. It helped that it was broken up into chapters, but I think I shot myself in the foot by sitting and watching it all in one lump. I may have to tackle this again someday in the future. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 04/08/21 Full Review Ethan S A groundbreaking film serial starring the magnetic Musidora. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/31/21 Full Review William L "It's Mazamette, friend of Philippe Guérande!" What? Mazamette has done more for other people than anyone else in this damn story, better show some respect. At seven hours, one of the more intimidating features to have appeared on the 1001 Films to See Before You Die, Les Vampires is nevertheless one of the more influential and popular of the early serials in the modern day. Condemned as commercial pulp upon first release, the film has grown in esteem not only for its technical accomplishment, but for its widespread influence on the modern thriller and action genres, predominantly crime films, but also general 'investigation' narratives and spy stories. That said, there are certainly plenty of populist elements that clearly were designed to appeal to a mass audience rather than critics - goofy gadgets, heist subplots, and melodrama. But is that really so different from your average modern action film? Les Vampires was among the most accomplished of the early films to establish such tropes, and deserves credit for doing so. In some ways, the film actually carries a greater degree of realism than modern counterparts; one of the recurring criticisms of fight scenes in action films is: "Why don't they just shoot them?" Well, here characters do that shockingly (often humorously) frequently. The structure would predict the course of several other long-running pieces of media in years to come, such as comic books, with its narrative conveniences and management of stakes in such a way that was designed to keep the narrative going without losing viewer interest, such as the introduction of new (oh, so much more terrifying!) antagonists when earlier counterparts are killed off, as when Satanas is introduced as the 'true' Grand Vampire. Plenty of diversity in the settings, including many on-location shots, bring a sense of energy to the film. A piece of film history that may be a bit tough to budget time for, but worth it to see the widespread influence that it has had among successive generations of writers, producers, and directors. (4/5) Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/13/21 Full Review s r 1001 movies to see before you die. This one was a chore. Thank goodness it was on public domain. Regardless, it still is a special production that went reminded me of a tv series. However, there are no actual vampire, just criminals. The plot was not the best though and it dragged at times. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Les Vampires

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis Marcel Levesque, Jean Ayme and Musidora star in a 1915 serial about an underground criminal society.
Director
Louis Feuillade
Genre
Crime, Drama
Runtime
7h 1m