Fantastique
Fantastique is a French term for a literary and cinematic genre that overlaps with science fiction, horror, and fantasy.
The fantastique is a substantial genre within French literature. Arguably dating back further than English language fantasy, it remains an active and productive genre which has evolved in conjunction with anglophone fantasy and horror and other French and international literature.
Definition
What is distinctive about the fantastique is the intrusion of supernatural phenomena into an otherwise realist narrative. It evokes phenomena which are not only left unexplained but which are inexplicable from the reader's point of view. In this respect, the fantastique is somewhere between fantasy, where the supernatural is accepted and entirely reasonable in the imaginary world of a non-realist narrative, and magic realism, where apparently supernatural phenomena are explained and accepted as normal. Instead, characters in a work of fantastique are, just like the readers, unwilling to accept the supernatural events that occur. This refusal may be mixed with doubt, disbelief, fear, or some combination of those reactions.The Fantastique is often linked to a particular ambiance, a sort of tension in the face of the impossible. A good deal of fear is often involved, either because the characters are afraid or because the author wants to provoke fright in the reader. However, fear is not an essential component of fantastique.
Some theorists of literature, such as Tzvetan Todorov, contend that the fantastique is defined by its hesitation between accepting the supernatural as such and trying to rationally explain the phenomena it describes. In that case, the fantastique is nothing more than a transitional area on a spectrum from magic realism to fantasy and does not qualify as a separate literary genre.
History
The Middle Ages
The fantastique began to become defined in the Middle Ages. The old Celtic, Frankish and Germanic myths were translated from religion into popular folklore.The root of modern thought about and artistic depiction of many things which are today often termed 'supernatural' has its beginnings in this period, often called the Middle Ages. Concepts and characters such as Melusine, Harlequin, Oberon, Morgan Le Fay, et cetera, were first given their definitive shapes at this time.
Significant contributions of the times include:
- The Chansons de geste such as La Chanson de Roland , Le Roman de Tristan et Iseult , Lancelot, ou Le Chevalier à la Charette and Perceval, ou le Conte du Graal , both by Chrétien de Troyes.
- Between 1215 and 1235, Robert de Boron, a successor of Chrétien de Troyes, published Histoire du Saint-Graal , Histoire de Merlin , Le Livre de Lancelot du Lac , La Quête du Saint-Graal and La Mort du Roi Arthu . These books formed the basis for all subsequent Arthurian legends, and established the now well known origins of the Holy Grail as the vessel in which Joseph of Arimathea collected the blood of Jesus Christ.
- The Fabliaux, satirical fables which relied on the tradition established by Aesop of using anthropomorphic animals such as Le Roman de Renart, generally attributed to poet Pierre de Saint-Cloud.
- Medieval poetry which often employed the supernatural as a mean of literary artifice, such as Le Roman de la Rose by Guillaume de Lorris, the ballads of Marie de France, Le Jeu de la Feuillée by Adam de la Halle, and the anonymous Le Livre de la Fontaine Périlleuse .
- The religious dramas called Mysteries and Miracles which often took several days to perform, and included spectacular stage effects, such as Le Jeu d'Adam ; La Résurrection du Sauveur ; Le Jeu de Saint Nicolas by Jean Bodel of Arras and the monumental Le Mystère de la Passion by Arnoul Gréban, organist and choirmaster of Notre Dame de Paris.
The Renaissance
The Renaissance bloomed in France during the reign of King Francis I who created a favorable environment for the development of letters, arts and sciences. It was during the French Renaissance that proto-science fiction first split from the fantastique. The traditional fantastique derived from myths, legends and folklore also split into one form which continued the poetic tradition of the Middle Ages and eventually led to the Merveilleux and the Contes de Fées or Fairy Tales, and the other, the darker side of the same literary coin, dealing with witchcraft and devil worship.
Significant contributions of the times include:
- In his Odes, poet Pierre de Ronsard, founder of the literary group La Pleïade, often drew heavily on the superstitions of his native Vendômois country, writing about witches. Then, at the peak of his literary fame, he devoted several of his more famous Hymnes to supernatural subjects such as "Daimons" and astrology.
- The classic novel L'Astrée by Honoré d'Urfé was obviously inspired by the prose romance of chivalry Amadis de Gaula, which had been circulating since the late 13th century, but reached its pinnacle when reassembled by Spanish writer Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo.
- Famous playwright Pierre Corneille's lesser-known but classic tragedies, Médée and Circé, popularized warlocks and witches as the deus ex machina of French theater.
- The Malleus Maleficarum spawned a number of French imitations, among which were Jean Bodin's La Démonomanie des Sorciers and Le Fléau des Démons et ses Sorciers .
The Age of Enlightenment
Baroque was the link between the Merveilleux of the Renaissance and the more formalized fairy tales of the Enlightenment period. The undeniable popularity of the genre was, in great part, attributable to the fact that Fairy Tales were safe; they did not imperil the soul — a serious concern for a nation which had just come out of an era of great religious persecution — and they appropriately reflected the grandeur of the Sun King's reign.
The precursor in the genre was Madame d'Aulnoy who, in 1690, introduced in her rambling novel Histoire d'Hyppolite, Comte de Douglas, a fairy tale entitled L'Île de la Félicité.
Significant contributions of the times include:
- In 1697, Charles Perrault, until then a renowned literary figure, a champion of sciences, released under his son's name Histoires ou Contes du Temps Passé a.k.a. Contes de ma Mère l'Oie. In it, Perrault had carefully collected a number of popular folk tales and legends, such as Cendrillon a.k.a. Cinderella, La Belle au Bois Dormant a.k.a. Sleeping Beauty, Peau d'Âne a.k.a. Donkey Skin, Le Petit Chaperon Rouge, Barbe-Bleue, Le Chat Botté, etc.
- Madame d'Aulnoy followed suit with a three-volume collection simply entitled Contes de Fées Fairy Tales, and then her Contes Nouveaux ou Les Fées à la Mode . Her best-remembered stories are L'Oiseau Bleu, La Chatte Blanche , and Le Nain Jaune, which spawned a popular board game.
- The Book of One Thousand and One Nights was "translated" into French — and quite possibly made up from very thin or non-existent sources as no earlier Arabic manuscripts of Aladdin and Ali Baba are known to exist — by Antoine Galland from 1704 to 1717.
- In Zadig, Voltaire mocked his contemporaries' predilection for the Fairy Tales, while making use of the same literary devices.
- Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont, whose classic La Belle et la Bête has transcended the ages, authored forty collections of tales, published in London between 1750 and 1780. La Belle et la Bête was, itself, based on an earlier fairy tale by Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve, included in her collection La jeune américaine et les contes marins.
- Jacques Cazotte, who had started as a writer of Fairy Tales, such as La Patte du Chat and Les Mille et Une Fadaises, soon tired of it and ended up writing darker tales.
- Chevalier gathered the best Fairy Tales of the times and released a forty-one volume anthology entitled Le Cabinet des Fées, published in Amsterdam and Geneva between 1785 and 1789 — the first specialized fantasy imprint ever published.
As the spiritual influence of the Church waned, thinkers dreamed of new faiths. Many of these based their thinking on occult knowledge allegedly handed down through the ages, from the Orient to the Knights Templar and, finally, to the Freemasons and the Rosicrucians who flourished during the Age of Enlightenment.
- In 1670, the Abbé Nicolas-Pierre-Henri de Montfaucon de Villars published the thinly disguised occult fiction, Le Comte de Gabalis, sub-titled Entretiens sur les Sciences Secrètes. Having disclosed secret knowledge allegedly led to the Abbott's murder by Rosicrucians in 1675.
- In 1731, the Abbé Jean Terrasson wrote Séthos, Histoire ou Vie Tirée des Monuments, Anecdotes de l'Ancienne Égypte, whose pseudo-Egyptian and occult themes were later tapped by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart for his opera The Magic Flute.
- Cazotte's Le Diable amoureux was sub-titled un roman fantastique, the first time in literary history that a work was so labeled. The Devil in Love could be considered the first modern French horror novel. In it, a young nobleman conjures up a demon who assumes the shape of a beautiful woman. The supernatural was not treated as a fantasmagory, or for satirical or philosophical purposes. It was intended to be real and to induce fear in the reader.
- Another work in the same vein was Vathek, a novel written directly into French in 1787 by English-born writer William Thomas Beckford. A Byronic figure steeped in occult knowledge and sexual perversions, Beckford allegedly wrote his novel non-stop in three days and two nights in a state of trance.
- Finally, in 1813, the very strange Le Manuscrit Trouvé à Saragosse'' was published. Like Vathek, it was written directly into French by a non-French writer, the Polish count and scientist Jan Potocki.
19th century
French fantastique writers of the 19th century were diversely influenced by the English Gothic novel writers, especially Ann Radcliffe, Matthew Gregory Lewis, Sheridan Le Fanu, and Charles Maturin, German author E. T. A. Hoffmann and composer Richard Wagner, American writer Edgar Allan Poe, British poets Lord Byron and Oscar Wilde.
It was during this incredibly rich century that we started seeing a split between the more lurid and exploitative fantastique dubbed fantastique populaire, and the more literary forms adopted by mainstream writers, dubbed fantastique littéraire.
Romans noirs
As the 19th century was about to begin, the English gothic novels became a major influence on the development of the fantastique. Their extravagant and macabre nature tapped into the emotions released during the French Revolution, and eventually helped the genre to seamlessly evolve into the more modern forms of the fantastique.The English gothic writers helped launch a wave of what the French called romans noirs, or romans frénétiques, which became the first subgenre of popular literature. Notable works in that category include:
- Coelina, ou l'Enfant du Mystère by François Guillaume Ducray-Duminil.
- Cyprien Bérard's Lord Rutwen ou les Vampires, which was adapted into a stage play by Charles Nodier the same year, and starred John William Polidori's vampire character Lord Ruthven.
- Falthurne by Honoré de Balzac, a novel about a virgin prophetess who knows occult secrets that date all the way back to Ancient Mesopotamia. Also of note by Balzac: Le Centenaire , inspired by Melmoth the Wanderer, L'Élixir de Longue Vie , Louis Lambert, about a man seeking higher dimensions, the aptly named La Recherche de l'Absolu , whose hero is an alchemist, and Melmoth Réconcilié .
- Charles Nodier with Smarra ou les Démons de la Nuit , a series of terrifying dream-based tales. Nodier's masterpiece was La Fée aux Miettes . In it, a young carpenter is devoted to the eponymous Fairy, who may be the legendary Queen of Sheba. In order to restore her to her true form, he searches for the magical Singing Mandragore. Nodier could rightfully lay claim to being one of the world's first "high fantasy" writers, sixty years before William Morris.
- The three-volume La Vampire by Étienne-Léon de Lamothe-Langon which tells the story of a young Napoleonic army officer who bring his Hungarian fiancée home to later discover that she is a vampire, and Le Diable featuring the charismatic, evil Chevalier Draxel.
- Victor Hugo with Han d'Islande , a bloody tale featuring a Viking warrior and a mythical bear, Bug-Jargal and the morbid and romantic L'Homme qui Rit a.k.a. The Man Who Laughs about a horribly disfigured man who lived in 17th century England.
- Frédéric Soulié with the classic Les Mémoires du Diable which combined the roman frénétique with the passions of the Marquis de Sade.
Fantastique populaire
- Alexandre Dumas, père was finely attuned to the literary marketplace. The success of Hoffmann's Tales and of the Thousand And One Nights influenced him to write Les Mille et Un Fantômes , an anthology of macabre tales. Dumas wrote his own version of Lord Ruthwen in Le Vampire. Finally, in 1857, he penned one of the first modern werewolf stories, Le Meneur de Loups .
- Edgar Quinet wrote Ahasvérus, a lengthy and sophisticated poetic narrative about the Wandering Jew, and a remarkable book about Merlin, Merlin l'Enchanteur .
- Eugène Sue's own Wandering Jew narrative, Le Juif Errant , was serialized in 1844–45. Dumas' Isaac Laquedem appeared in 1853.
- Paul Féval, père was one of the most important fantastique writers of the period with Les Revenants , La Fille du Juif Errant , the macabre La Vampire , and La Ville Vampire which parodied Ann Radcliffe, making her the book's fictional heroine!
Fantastique littéraire
- In 1839, Gérard de Nerval collaborated with Alexandre Dumas on L'Alchimiste . Mentally unhinged after a lover's death, Nerval developed an interest in mystical beliefs, especially in his book Les Illuminés. Note that after being institutionalized, his work began taking on an increasing visionary quality, though non-fantastique with Aurélia and Les Filles du Feu .
- In La Morte Amoureuse, Théophile Gautier told the story of a young priest who falls in love with a beautiful female vampire. In it, the vampire is not a soulless creature, but a loving and erotic woman. Gautier's Avatar and Spirite are roman spirites which deal with the theme of life after death.
- Prosper Mérimée's La Vénus d'Ille, features a pagan statue that comes to life and kills a young groom on his wedding night
- Rustic legends of the Alsace were also the main source of inspiration of Émile Erckmann and Alexandre Chatrian, a writing team who signed their works Erckmann-Chatrian. Their first collection, Les Contes Fantastiques , includes the classic short story L'Araignée Crabe , about a blood-sucking lake monster with the body of a spider and the head of a man.
- Jules Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly wrote tales of terror in which morbid passions are acted out in bizarre crimes, such as Les Diaboliques . Also of note is L'Ensorcelé.
- In 1858, Gustave Flaubert produced what may very well be the first work of modern French heroic fantasy, Salammbô, a brash, colorful and exotic novel about ancient Carthage.
- Joris-Karl Huysmans created new dramatic templates for old concepts, such as the Devil, witchcraft, etc. in books such as À Rebours and Là-Bas .
- Guy de Maupassant followed in the footsteps of Poe, and anticipated H. P. Lovecraft, becoming obsessed with the notion of slow descent into madness caused by fearsome otherworldly forces. His masterpiece was Le Horla, which was the basis for the 1963 film Diary of a Madman. In it, it is revealed that Man shared the Earth with invisible beings of great powers to whom we are only cattle.
- The eclectic Villiers de l'Isle-Adam whose macabre Contes Cruels and Tribulat Bonhomet were also inspired by Poe.
- Marcel Schwob with the classic Le Roi au Masque d'Or .
- Jean Lorrain, also obsessed with the nature of evil, with Buveurs d'Âmes , "Les contes d'un buveur d'éther", the kabbalistic novel La Mandragore and Monsieur de Phocas.
- Octave Mirbeau's sadistic and mean-spirited tales of murders, cannibalism and ghostly revenge collected in Le Jardin des Supplices .
- Belgian poet Maurice Maeterlinck won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1911. The author of the classic Pelléas et Mélisande wrote the perennial classic L'Oiseau Bleu , an allegorical fantasy conceived as a play for children.
- Also from Belgium, Franz Hellens, a precursor of the surrealists, displayed a lyrical, romantic approach to fantasy. Les Hors-le-Vent and Nocturnal explored into the land of dreams, which he dubbed the "second life", while his novel Mélusine was generally considered a pre-surrealist novel.
20th century prior to World War II
The split between fantastique populaire and fantastique littéraire was definitively formed. The former was written by writers walking in the footsteps of Dumas, Sue and Féval, the latter by successors of Hoffmann, Poe and the symbolists.
Fantastique populaire
Between the wars, the fantastique populaire continued to cater to the masses by providing cheap entertainment in the form of feuilletons: pulp magazines such as Le Journal des Voyages, Lectures Pour Tous and L'Intrépide and paperbacks from publishers such as Ollendorff, Méricant, Férenczi and Tallandier. Significant names of the times include:- Belgian Jean Ray is considered the most famous and influential author of fantastique of the period and is generally regarded by genre scholars as the French-language equivalent of Poe and Lovecraft. Ray began his career as a pulp writer, using a variety of aliases, and had several stories published in Weird Tales. His output can be divided into three parts. Short stories steeped in the rich, mist-shrouded atmosphere of his native Flanders; a few novels, including the classic Malpertuis and rewritten translations of an unauthorized Sherlock Holmes pastiche, Harry Dickson. His close friend and citizen-fellow Michel de Ghelderode was another contemporary Belgian auteur fantastique.
- Gaston Leroux with La Double Vie de Theophraste Longuet , in which a retired merchant is possessed by the spirit of 18th century French highwayman Cartouche; the Hoffmannesque L'Homme qui a Vu le Diable ; the classic Le Fantôme de l'Opéra a.k.a. The Phantom of the Opera and Le Coeur Cambriolé .
- Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre who unleashed their character Fantômas, the first modern sociopathic villain, in 1911.
- André de Lorde, nicknamed the "Prince of Terror", a prolific playwright who wrote over one hundred and fifty plays for the Grand Guignol theater, collected in various volumes, including Théâtre d'Épouvante , Théâtre Rouge , Les Drames Célèbres du Grand-Guignol and Théâtre de la Peur .
- Arthur Bernède, creator of Judex and Belphégor.
- Claude Farrère, the first recipient of the French Prix Goncourt literary award, wrote La Maison des Hommes Vivants in which a sect of immortals, founded by the Count of St Germain, steals others' life forces in order to preserve their own immortality.
- One of the most distinctive genre writers of the 1930s, who also blended genres with deceptive facility, was Pierre Véry, whose mystery novels always incorporated surreal or supernatural elements. Some of his works squarely belonged in the fantasy genre, such as Le Pays sans Étoiles and Tout Doit Disparaître le 5 Mai , a collection of fantastic tales.
Fantastique littéraire
- Dadaism began as a nihilistic artistic movement that paralleled the political anarchist movements of the times. In France, it was heralded by Guillaume Apollinaire with L'Enchanteur Pourrissant , a poetic dialog between Merlin and Viviane, and L'Hérésiarque et Cie., a collection of short stories written between 1899 and 1910, dealing with a variety of fantasy themes such as magic, invisibility, etc.
- In La Révolte des anges , Anatole France wrote a startling tale in which the Fallen angel Arcade schemes to organize a new revolt among the fallen angels who are living on Earth, posing as artists.
- Guillaume Apollinaire was the first, true herald of surrealism. By the time of his death, in 1918, he had made it possible for the never-ending search for the bizarre in literature to be viewed not just as an amusing but pointless game, but as a true method, a metaphysical quest, reflecting more profound concerns and higher literary ambitions.
- Blaise Cendrars openly declared his admiration for Gustave Le Rouge. His La Fin du Monde Filmée par l'Ange and Moravagine are surrealist novels, the latter named after, and telling the story of, an evil madman whose crimes rival those of Fantômas, a character much appreciated by the Surrealists.
- Pierre Benoit's classic L'Atlantide was a superb variation on a theme introduced by H. Rider Haggard in She, and told the story of two French Officers who find the lost city of Atlantis in the midst of the Sahara, and fall in love with its beautiful queen, Antinea. It was filmed several times.
- The Faustian Marguerite de la Nuit , by Pierre Mac Orlan, was also made into a film.
- Jean Cocteau produced such acclaimed works as the poems of L'Ange Heurtebise , the plays Orphée and Les Chevaliers de la Table Ronde , and the hauntingly beautiful and surreal 1945 film version of La Belle et la Bête a.k.a. Beauty and the Beast.
- Jules Supervielle, a writer of Basque descent, incorporated Hispanic vistas and fantasy themes in his novel L'Enfant de la Haute Mer .
- One of the greatest literary figures in Belgian history was eccentric playwright Michel de Ghelderode, a true visionary whose folkish morality plays and stories resonated with Hieronymus Bosch-like humor and fantasy. Magie Rouge and La Ballade du Grand Macabre brought to life the macabre tradition of Flemish culture.
- Belgian author Henri Michaux created a series of novels which read like voyages extraordinaires of the surreal with Voyage en Grande Garabagne , Au Pays de la Magie and Ici, Poddema , creating imaginary lands, peopled with colorful inhabitants who followed strange customs.
- Playwright Jean Giraudoux combined tragedy, humor and fantasy in Intermezzo, where a timid ghost revolutionizes a small town, and Ondine about a water sprite who falls in love with a mortal.
- Julien Gracq's first novel, The Castle of Argol combined the effects of the roman noir with the poetry of Arthur Rimbaud. The book takes place in a Gormenghast-like castle where the young owner, his friend and the beautiful Heide spend their time playing morbid and decadent games. In 1951, Gracq published the brilliant The Opposing Shore which won the Prix Goncourt and takes place in the fictional country of Orsenna.
- Finally, Marcel Aymé deserves a special mention for his humorous and fantastic universe that combines wit and social satire with fantasy, in works such as Le Passe-Muraille about an obscure clerk who acquires the power to walk through solid objects and his animal fables, .
20th century post World War II
Significant foreign influences on French modern fantastique include Franz Kafka, Jorge Luis Borges, H. P. Lovecraft, Dino Buzzati, Julio Cortázar, Vladimir Nabokov and Richard Matheson. Other more recent influences included Stephen King, J. R. R. Tolkien and Robert E. Howard, none of whom were well known in France before the early 1980s. The growth in popularity of heroic fantasy during the last decade is a tribute to the Americanization of world culture.
Some of the most interesting authors and works up to the 1980s are:
- Marcel Béalu's fantasy followed the path of Hoffman, Poe and Gérard de Nerval. In his stories, hapless souls became slowly trapped in dream-like realities where inhuman forces held sway. L'Expérience de la Nuit deals with the power to see into other dimensions. L'Araignée d'Eau is about an impossible love between a man and a watery creature who slowly turns into a girl.
- Marcel Brion's approach of the supernatural almost always referred to the romantic tradition and the search for a mystical absolute. His most famous collection of stories is Les Escales de la Haute Nuit .
- André Pieyre de Mandiargues' gift was to make the invisible visible with an implacable sense of logic and an almost maniacal precision. His stories are collected in Le Musée Noir and Soleil des Loups .
- André Dhôtel used adolescents as protagonists to make us experience wondrous events, always presented in a disturbingly matter-of-fact way, in La Chronique Fabuleuse and Le Pays où l'on n'arrive Jamais .
- Noël Devaulx' own brand of fantastique relied of the intrusion of strange and unexplainable into everyday reality. His short stories were dubbed "parables without keys." His best collections are L'Auberge Parpillon and Le Pressoir Mystique .
- In 1954, publisher Fleuve Noir launched a dedicated horror imprint, Angoisse, which continued monthly until 1974, publishing a total of 261 horror novels, including books by, B. R. Bruss, Maurice Limat, Kurt Steiner, André Caroff's Madame Atomos series and Jean-Claude Carrière's series of Frankenstein novels.
- The prolific Claude Seignolle's brand of fantastique was influenced by his "sorcerous childhood" spent in the misty plains of his native Sologne, and a terrifying encounter with the Devil incarnated in a local warlock which he claimed to have experienced at age 15 in 1932. This conferred a real sense of authenticity to Seignolle's books, which were almost devoid of any literary artifices. His major works include La Malvenue and the collections Histoires Maléfiques and Contes Macabres .
- One writer who defied any attempt at classification was Pierre Gripari who first wrote truculent, colorful genre novels, such as La Vie, la Mort et la Resurrection de Socrate-Marie Gripotard , about a Candide-like superman and L'Incroyable Equipée de Phosphore Noloc , an homage to Jules Verne in which the hero discovers that our cosmos is really inside a woman's womb, before penning modern fairy tales such as Contes de la Rue Broca , which became very popular in the 1980s.
- Christia Sylf's Kobor Tigan't and its sequel, Le Règne de Ta , take place 30,000 years ago, during the reign of the Giants, a mythical pre-Atlantean race. The novels tell of the conflict between the sorcerous Queen-Mother, Abim, and her daughters Opak, who rules Kobor Tigan’t, the five-levelled City of the Giants, and her sister, Ta. The world of Kobor Tigan’t is inhabited by a race of reptilian bisexual humanoids, theT’los, who are used as sex slaves by the Giants. The novels also features the crystal-like Elohim, messengers of alien powers from beyond. The Kobor Tigan’t novels cannot be compared to anything published in England or America. They contain erotic scenes as well as esoteric elements that one rarely finds in the literary worlds of Tolkien or Howard.
- Charles Duits belonged to the same rich and colorful tradition. With Ptah Hotep and Nefer, he wrote a heroic-fantasy saga that takes place on a parallel Earth with two moons—Athenade and Thana—during the time of Ancient Egypt and the Roman Empire.
- Pierre Barbet
- Michel Bernanos
- Jean-Louis Bouquet
- Serge Brussolo
- Georges-Olivier Châteaureynaud
- Lise Deharme
- Alain Dorémieux
- Nathalie Henneberg
- Rockne S. O'Bannon
- Jacques Sadoul
- Marcel Schneider
- Jacques Sternberg
- Roland Topor
- Julia Verlanger
Awards
Every year since 1994 the Fantastic'Arts festival awards Fantastique films in the French town of Gerardmer.