Picture of author.

Marcel Allain (1885–1969)

Author of Fantômas

57+ Works 1,055 Members 13 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the names: Marcel Allain, Marcello Allain

Image credit: bd-nostalgie.org

Series

Works by Marcel Allain

Fantômas (1911) 635 copies
The Silent Executioner (1911) 147 copies
The Corpse Who Kills (1911) 61 copies
A Royal Prisoner (1911) 31 copies
A Nest of Spies (1911) 24 copies
The Daughter of Fantomas (1911) 15 copies
The Long Arm of Fantomas (1911) 10 copies
Fantomas Captured (1926) 8 copies
Juve in the Dock (1926) 7 copies
Le Rour (1908) 6 copies
The Lord of Terror (1925) 6 copies
The Revenge of Fantomas (1927) 5 copies
Fantoma: Boş Tabut (1913) 4 copies
Fantômas, tome 3 (1989) 4 copies
Mõrvahotell : [romaan] (1997) 3 copies
La fine di Fantomas (1913) 3 copies
Džoki maskis : [romaan] (1913) 2 copies
Madame Satan 1 copy

Associated Works

Louis Feuillade's Fantômas: The Complete Saga (2016) — Creator — 14 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1885-09-15
Date of death
1969-08-25
Gender
male
Nationality
France

Members

Reviews

This will be short and sweet. Fantomas is an engaging, entertaining, and rightfully classic read. Interesting characters, lots of plot twists, and old-fashioned drama. If you like melodramatic mysteries, this is one (of several in the series) not to be missed.
 
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colligan | 8 other reviews | Jul 1, 2022 |
Particularly enjoyable because of how stereotypical the book starts out. "Of course nobody could have possibly killed the woman for these ten reasons, and she was always so careful not to be killed". But persevere through that and the story goes in many interesting and novel directions.

The book is available for free even in English presumably as public domain. However, the translation is hard to bear as the translator insisted on using stereotypical British words like chap, egad, and so on liberally throughout the book.

Next time I'd pay for a better translation.
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eatonphil | 8 other reviews | May 8, 2022 |
Crime story about man who is master of disguise. So mysterious that by end i still wasn't sure what his plan was, which is a bit too mysterious. Overall not bad though.
 
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wreade1872 | 8 other reviews | Nov 28, 2021 |
I am Fantômas!... I am he for whom the entire world is searching, whom none has ever seen, whom none can recognize!... I am Crime incarnated!... I am Night!... No human sees my face, because Crime and Night are featureless!... I am illimitable Power!... I am he who mocks at all the powers, at all the efforts, at all the forces!... I am Death!... I am Fantômas!

Utterly preposterous and improbable, full of unlikely coincidences, and more disguises and mistaken identities than a bagful of Shakespeare comedies, and often bafflingly confusing when the authors decide not to immediately make it clear which of the established characters are in the scene - exactly what I was anticipating!

As Souvestre and Allain were contracted to write a book per month, a certain formulaity and predictability in terms of plot are to be expected, as well as an occasional slapdash feel, but as I didn't want to be mentally exercised when I picked up this book, that was fine.

Despite knowing the ingredients, the exact dish being served is not always so certain, and there is still a lot of tension in the narrative, with part of the pleasure lying in figuring out which of the characters will turn out to be Fantômas. While for the series to continue, Fantômas must escape the clutches of Detective Juve and his journalist protege, Fandor, the interest is not if but how he will manage to evade capture.

In this instalment, espionage, military secrets and the security services are the trappings surrounding Fantômas's machinations. Written in the years approaching the Great War, there is some historical interest in the social and political anxieties being played upon, and some nationalist stereotypes about who are the ""good guys" and who are the "bad".

It's been a while since I read the previous books in the series, but this one strikes me as being more (intentionally) humorous than those.

Excellent genre fiction for when you just want to put your feet up and be swept along.
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Flagged
Michael.Rimmer | Mar 18, 2021 |

Lists

Awards

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Associated Authors

John Ashbery Introduction
Edward Gorey Introduction
Fred Marcellino Cover artist
Candice Black Introduction
Alfred Allinson Translator
B.M. Lieveer Translator
Lea Rachwitz Translator

Statistics

Works
57
Also by
1
Members
1,055
Popularity
#24,420
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
13
ISBNs
119
Languages
9
Favorited
2

Charts & Graphs