Faceless is
a rather unscrupulous, but not entirely tasteless, splatter film from Jess Franco that is a loose addition to
his long running Dr. Orloff series that began in 1962 with The Awful Dr. Orloff. It’s got a bigger budget than the usual Franco film, thanks to French producer Rene Chateau, and it shows. Being more a
fan of Franco’s ‘no-budget’ erotic
surrealist horror from the late ‘60s, early ‘70s, it was interesting for me to
see him do the gory ‘80s thing rather adequately. The cast is also a treat for genre-fans, as it includes several fan
favorites who are all great in their parts, like Helmut Berger, Brigitte Lahaie, Telly Savalas, Caroline Munro,
Lina Romay, and Howard Vernon as Dr. Orloff, who, like Romay, is only here for a brief but memorable cameo.
Along with the
copious gore candy, a major strength here is the addition of numerous
well-acted villains. It’s like a gathering of abhorrent human monsters that are
all a representation of the darker, evil side of human nature and therefore realistic,
but there’s also a fantasy angle, too, with the beauty restoration operations
and the youthful look of Dr. Orloff’s elderly wife (Romay) bringing Faceless
into the realm of Cinema Fantastique. The surgical operations are the most gruesome
element; the way the eyes still move from the still conscious, drugged victims
after their faces have been surgically removed is extremely disturbing. The man
in charge of the real dirty work of disposing the bodies of the captured girls,
Gordon (Gérard Zalcberg), brings on
the gore, too, and is also the most outwardly monstrous creation of the bunch
(I can’t help wishing that he was called Morpho, to keep up with a Franco tradition for these types of
characters).