The same is true of Fanju’s most famous film Les Yeux sans visage, which also uses aspects of the scientific documentary film to accentuate horror. Les Yeux sans visage proved so horrific that audience members in Edinburgh fainted during screenings. Throughout the film, there is a specific focus on the scientific aspects of the procedures Dr. Genessier performs. This is most notable during the most graphic grafting scene in the film during which a large importance is placed on surgical lamps, the scalpel being used, gloves, masks, and operating tables. Once again, the contradiction between the methodical, scientific approach to this horrific situation and the situation itself serves to accentuate the horror. Les Yeux sans visage also uses surrealist elements in order to address aspects of post-war life. During one scene, loud, disrupting noises of an airplane and church bells are heard while Dr. Genessier and Louise bury a failed facial graft candidate. This scene serves to portray the loss of faith in Medicine (represented by the body created by another of Dr. Genessier’s many failed attempts to complete this surgery), the progress of Technology (represented by the airplane), and the comfort of religion (represented by the church bells). This surrealist combination forces a new view of modernity and thus a reevaluation of the past.