During the last three months, we presented you a film special each Saturday. Today, the last of the series, La nouvelle mission de Judex/The New Mission of Judex (1917-1918), a French, silent crime serial directed by Louis Feuillade and produced by Gaumont. The title character, Judex (René Cresté), is a positive and cool superhero who steals to help the poor
René Cresté. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Édouard Mathé. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
René Cresté & Georgette de Néry. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Judex was the first superhero of the cinema. The caped crusader was introduced in the crime-adventure Judex (1917), a French silent serial in twelve parts directed by Louis Feuillade.
In 1916, Feuillade and writer Arthur Bernède had begun to develop a surrealistic character called 'Jacques de Tremeuse' (aka Judex) - a mysterious avenger who sports a signature long dark cloak, a wide-brimmed black hat, and a fatalistic air.
Judex (which translates as Justice) appears and disappears like a ghost, and seems to have hypnotic powers. He is a master of disguise, and an excellent fighter. He commands the loyalty of an organization composed of circus folks and redeemed apaches.
Finally, he flies a plane and has a secret lair, where he interrogates his prisoners through a ‘television’ screen - everything Judex writes on the screen on his desk appears on a similar screen on the wall of his victim's cell.
The character's arch-nemesis is the callous banker Favraux, who has carelessly driven thousands of people into bankruptcy.
René Cresté. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Louis Leubas. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Marcel Lévesque. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Olinda Mano. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Judex began production in 1917 and the 12-part serial was released the same year in its first instalment to critical and public praise.
Jeffrey M. Anderson at Combustible Celluloid calls Judex an ‘unalloyed masterwork’, “establishing Feuillade as one of history's greatest directors. He had an uncanny knack for finding shocking beauty in simple images, such as a gate or a wall or an antique car driving down the road”.
Louis Feuillade had already made two popular earlier serials, Fantômas (1913) and Les Vampires (1915) which were popular with audiences, but drew criticism for glorifying criminals.
The amazingly cool and positive Judex was played by René Cresté, a French stage and film actor and director of the silent film era.
Cresté, who was already popular among female audiences, now became an immensely popular film star.
Judex also starred Musidora as villainess and Favraux' mistress Diana Monti, Édouard Mathé as Jacques' brother Roger, Louis Leubas as the banker Favraux, Marcel Lévesque as the amateur detective Cocantin, Gaston Michel as Kerjean, Jean Devalde as his criminal son Morales, Yvette Andréyor as Jacqueline, the daughter of Favraux; the little girl (!) Olinda Mano as her little son Jean, and in a small part the young René Poyen.
Yvette Andréyor. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Georgette de Néry. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Andrew Brunelle. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Juana Borguèse. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Félix / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Simultaneously with the release of Judex in the cinemas, a novelization of the film serial, signed by both Feuillade and Bernède, was released, first as a serial in Le Petit Parisien, then in a collected edition by Tallandier.
The following year a sequel was made, La nouvelle mission de Judex/The New Mission of Judex (1917-1918, Louis Feuillade).
Most characters from Judex returned: Judex (René Cresté), Jacqueline (Yvette Andréyor), her father Favraux (Louis Leubas), clumsy Cocantin (Marcel Lévesque), little Jean (Olinda Mano) and Roger (Édouard Mathé).
Jacques/ Judex has married Jacqueline, so he has become a father to her son Jean. Jacques' brother Roger loves a neighbour girl Primerose (Georgette de Néry), whose father is the inventor Milton (Emile Keppens).
Their happiness is threatened by the dangerous gang La rafle aux secrets (the raiders of the secrets), who avid to steal and resell important technological inventions. The evil Dr. Howey (Andrew Brunelle) and his accomplice, the dangerous Baronne d'Apremont (Juana Borguèse), both have the capacities to hypnotise the innocent Jacqueline and Primerose, and make them do things against their will. Jacqueline threatens to poison her already ill son, while Primerose steals her father's invention and kidnaps little Jean.
The Baronne and her female aid Gaby (Cyprian Gilles) hold Jean, but they are captured and imprisoned by Judex and Cocantin. Gaby repents but the Baronne escapes. Dr. Hewey and the Baronne die when their boat explodes, accidentally caused by Cocantin.
In the end Primerose is cured and marries Roger. Remarkable is that the theft of the invention seems an excuse to display the hysterical crises and hypnotised states of the women, while the Baronne and Gaby seem to be very close to another and the previous strict boundaries between good woman/bad woman in Judex are blurred.
The sequel landed René Cresté definitively in ‘le Panthéon du cinéma’, as Philippe Pelletier writes so beautifully at CinéArtistes. The film studio, Gaumont, created this beautiful series of Les Artistes de Judex postcards, published by Coquemer Gravures in Paris, to advertise the new series.
A remake was made in 1934 under the same title, directed by Maurice Champreux, and starring René Ferté as Judex.
Another remake was done in 1963 by director Georges Franju under the same title. The story was shortened and simplified but remained true to the original. American magician Channing Pollock was cast as the mysterious hero.
René Cresté. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Édouard Mathé. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Louis Leubas. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Marcel Lévesque. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
René Cresté and Edouard Mathé. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Next Saturday we start a new series on photographers for star postcards.
Sources: Jeffrey M. Anderson (Combustible Celluloid), Philippe Pelletier (CinéArtistes) (French), Wikipedia and IMDb.
René Cresté. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Édouard Mathé. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
René Cresté & Georgette de Néry. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
The First Superhero of the Cinema
Judex was the first superhero of the cinema. The caped crusader was introduced in the crime-adventure Judex (1917), a French silent serial in twelve parts directed by Louis Feuillade.
In 1916, Feuillade and writer Arthur Bernède had begun to develop a surrealistic character called 'Jacques de Tremeuse' (aka Judex) - a mysterious avenger who sports a signature long dark cloak, a wide-brimmed black hat, and a fatalistic air.
Judex (which translates as Justice) appears and disappears like a ghost, and seems to have hypnotic powers. He is a master of disguise, and an excellent fighter. He commands the loyalty of an organization composed of circus folks and redeemed apaches.
Finally, he flies a plane and has a secret lair, where he interrogates his prisoners through a ‘television’ screen - everything Judex writes on the screen on his desk appears on a similar screen on the wall of his victim's cell.
The character's arch-nemesis is the callous banker Favraux, who has carelessly driven thousands of people into bankruptcy.
René Cresté. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Louis Leubas. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Marcel Lévesque. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Olinda Mano. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Amazingly Cool
Judex began production in 1917 and the 12-part serial was released the same year in its first instalment to critical and public praise.
Jeffrey M. Anderson at Combustible Celluloid calls Judex an ‘unalloyed masterwork’, “establishing Feuillade as one of history's greatest directors. He had an uncanny knack for finding shocking beauty in simple images, such as a gate or a wall or an antique car driving down the road”.
Louis Feuillade had already made two popular earlier serials, Fantômas (1913) and Les Vampires (1915) which were popular with audiences, but drew criticism for glorifying criminals.
The amazingly cool and positive Judex was played by René Cresté, a French stage and film actor and director of the silent film era.
Cresté, who was already popular among female audiences, now became an immensely popular film star.
Judex also starred Musidora as villainess and Favraux' mistress Diana Monti, Édouard Mathé as Jacques' brother Roger, Louis Leubas as the banker Favraux, Marcel Lévesque as the amateur detective Cocantin, Gaston Michel as Kerjean, Jean Devalde as his criminal son Morales, Yvette Andréyor as Jacqueline, the daughter of Favraux; the little girl (!) Olinda Mano as her little son Jean, and in a small part the young René Poyen.
Yvette Andréyor. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Georgette de Néry. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Andrew Brunelle. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Juana Borguèse. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Félix / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
The New Mission of Judex
Simultaneously with the release of Judex in the cinemas, a novelization of the film serial, signed by both Feuillade and Bernède, was released, first as a serial in Le Petit Parisien, then in a collected edition by Tallandier.
The following year a sequel was made, La nouvelle mission de Judex/The New Mission of Judex (1917-1918, Louis Feuillade).
Most characters from Judex returned: Judex (René Cresté), Jacqueline (Yvette Andréyor), her father Favraux (Louis Leubas), clumsy Cocantin (Marcel Lévesque), little Jean (Olinda Mano) and Roger (Édouard Mathé).
Jacques/ Judex has married Jacqueline, so he has become a father to her son Jean. Jacques' brother Roger loves a neighbour girl Primerose (Georgette de Néry), whose father is the inventor Milton (Emile Keppens).
Their happiness is threatened by the dangerous gang La rafle aux secrets (the raiders of the secrets), who avid to steal and resell important technological inventions. The evil Dr. Howey (Andrew Brunelle) and his accomplice, the dangerous Baronne d'Apremont (Juana Borguèse), both have the capacities to hypnotise the innocent Jacqueline and Primerose, and make them do things against their will. Jacqueline threatens to poison her already ill son, while Primerose steals her father's invention and kidnaps little Jean.
The Baronne and her female aid Gaby (Cyprian Gilles) hold Jean, but they are captured and imprisoned by Judex and Cocantin. Gaby repents but the Baronne escapes. Dr. Hewey and the Baronne die when their boat explodes, accidentally caused by Cocantin.
In the end Primerose is cured and marries Roger. Remarkable is that the theft of the invention seems an excuse to display the hysterical crises and hypnotised states of the women, while the Baronne and Gaby seem to be very close to another and the previous strict boundaries between good woman/bad woman in Judex are blurred.
The sequel landed René Cresté definitively in ‘le Panthéon du cinéma’, as Philippe Pelletier writes so beautifully at CinéArtistes. The film studio, Gaumont, created this beautiful series of Les Artistes de Judex postcards, published by Coquemer Gravures in Paris, to advertise the new series.
A remake was made in 1934 under the same title, directed by Maurice Champreux, and starring René Ferté as Judex.
Another remake was done in 1963 by director Georges Franju under the same title. The story was shortened and simplified but remained true to the original. American magician Channing Pollock was cast as the mysterious hero.
René Cresté. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Édouard Mathé. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Louis Leubas. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Marcel Lévesque. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
René Cresté and Edouard Mathé. French postcard by Coquemer Gravures, Paris. Photo: Gerschel / Gaumont. Still for La nouvelle mission de Judex (Louis Feuillade, 1917-1918).
Next Saturday we start a new series on photographers for star postcards.
Sources: Jeffrey M. Anderson (Combustible Celluloid), Philippe Pelletier (CinéArtistes) (French), Wikipedia and IMDb.
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