

1915 cinema sold its soul for this—literally. The devil's first Hollywood close-up.
Reflecting the plot of Charles Gounod's opera, Faust, an old man, sits unhappy in his study. Méphistophélès materializes and offers a devil's bargain - youth and vigor in exchange for Faust's soul. Faust accepts and instantly transforms into a young man. The two go out on the town, and Faust lays eyes on Marguerite, a virgin whose brother Valentin is her protector. Valentin goes to war, leaving Marguerite in the care of his friend Siébel and under the watchful eye of his neighbor, Marthe. Faust courts Marguerite while Méphistophélès chats with Marthe. Seduction, loss of reputation, pregnancy, and tragedy follow.
Practical Effects
1915 devil transformations—smoke, mirrors, and sheer nerve.
Costume
Méphistophélès' theatrical cape game is absolutely unhinged.

Director
Edward Sloman
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Edward Sloman directing AND playing Méphistophélès—1915 was truly the era of 'I'll do it myself.' This self-casting of the devil suggests either supreme confidence or a worrying self-awareness.
Gounod's 1859 opera was already considered risqué; adapting it for film in 1915 meant navigating censorship boards who found even the *implication* of Marguerite's pregnancy scandalous. The film likely cut around what the opera sang explicitly.