Freaks (DVD)
T**R
TOD BROWNING'S FREAKS
There used to be a theory in art college that many of the professors blandly bandied about like religious dogma. It was the theory of "aesthetics only." This theory maintained that it did not matter whether a painting was of a landscape, a penis, or non-representational. A work of art could only be judged by aesthetic criteria.The biggest problem with that theory is that it rarely holds true. A good example of this would be in comparing the work of Diego Riveria to the work of his wife, Frida Kahlo. Riveria was clearly a better painter aesthetically. He had a far better sense of composition, and a keener sense of color than Kahlo. However, Riveria lacked Kahlo's obsessive vision, and it is her vision that remains far more memorably etched in our conscience.Another example which blows the "aesthetics only" theory out of the water would be in comparing D.W. Griffith to his one-time assistant Tod Browning. There is no doubt that, aesthetically, Griffith was a far more innovative and fluid director. However, Griffith lacked two important qualities which Browning had in spades; obsessive vision and pronounced human empathy. It is the latter of these two vivid Browning qualities that renders Griffith a grossly inferior artist when compared to the inimitable Tod Browning.Browning was consistently drawn to and connected with the social outcast, while Griffith espoused his racial superiority and reprehensibly tidied that up in his protruding "aesthetics" chest. That Griffith was ( and still is) celebrated, smacks of American and Hollywood hypocrisy and superficiality at its most blatant.Of course, this is nothing new, nor is it confined to the film community. Conductor Rafael Kubelik was mercilessly attacked and driven out of Chicago by Tribune critic Claudia Cassidy because he programmed ethnic and contemporary music. How is the late Ms. Cassidy remembered? Chicago named a theater after her.Celebrated New York Times Music critic Olin Downes publicly ridiculed Dimitri Mitropoulos for his not so secret sexual preference. The freak Dimitri left the New York Philharmonic and succumbed to a fatal heart attack shortly after.Browning remains yet another outcast artist, who is critically compared in unfavorable standing next to the likes of Griffith and fellow "horror" director James Whale. Yet, Tod Browning defines the word auteur far more than these, or any director of his time, and he has had a far more impactful influence on the generation of auteur directors who followed him (including David Lynch, David Cronenberg, John Waters, Alejandro Jodorowksy, and Tim Burton [well, early Tim Burton]).After the 1931 box office success of Browning's Dracula and Whale's Frankenstein, MGM second in command Irving Thalberg approached Browning and asked him to come up with something to outdo both of those films. Browning responded with his manifesto, Freaks.From the beginning of Freaks` genesis, there were problems aplenty. Thalberg's fascistic boss, Louis B. Mayer, was vehemently opposed to it even at the conceptual stage, and his objections only intensified. During filming, many on the MGM lot found the sight of the freaks so disturbing that they sought to have the production stopped. Fortunately, Thalberg came to Browning's aid and saved filming from being sabotaged on numerous occasions.Then there is Thalberg himself, who remains one of Hollywood's most interesting paradoxes. Unlike Mayer, Thalberg loved movies and knowing his bad heart would doom him to an early grave, he worked diligently on projects he believed in, securing his legacy, albeit anonymously since he always refused screen credit. The Marx Brothers were a pet project. The brothers really did create as much surreal havoc off-screen as they did on and many at MGM wanted them gone, but Thalberg took them under his wing amd lavished their productions with so much professionalism, craftsmanship and care that the Marx Brothers films following Thalberg's death are substantially weaker.As much as Thalberg loved movies, he loved them for their entertainment value alone and he had no understanding of film as art. It was Thalberg, with Mayer, who butchered Stroheim's Greed. When Browning finished Freaks, Thalberg, who had previously defended Browning, did not hesitate to cut nearly a half hour of footage from the film (and, as was the norm at that time, burned the excised footage).It was not even box office whiplash, since the film opened to huge crowds in San Diego, but rather it was critical and audience reactions that prompted Thalberg to hand Browning over to the wolves . While Thalberg did give Browning the green light to proceed with the inferior Mark of the Vampire (1935) three years later, Freaks, in effect, ended Browning's career. He would only be given two more films, one of which, The Devil Doll (1936) he did not even receive screen credit for. Browning's career came to a whimpering close in 1939. He died an obscure, alcoholic recluse in 1962.Browning, the perennial outsider, could have cared less. He had run away from an affluent home at the age of 16 to join a carnival side show and the dancer he had fallen in love with. He began acting in his thirties, assisted Griffith, began making his own films and had been moving towards Freaks for years, stamping almost everything he touched with his own unique personality. Many of his films are lost, or exist only in truncated condition and very few of those have ever been released in any format whatsoever for the video market.The Unholy Three (1925),The Blackbird (1926),The Road to Mandalay (1926) the unjustly neglected, compelling The Show (1927)--with its own parade of freak characters, and soon to be labeled freak star, John Gilbert--the masterful The Unknown(1927,the lost London after Midnight (1927), West of Zanzibar (1928)and Where East is East (1929) are all unmistakably the hand of Browning. Not coincidentally, all languish in obscurity. Browning himself continues to be dismissed by less insightful critics, who evaluate the man and his work by contemporary entertainment standards or even accuse the great empathetic artist of exploitation. Browning's standing still remains low. Neither he, nor any of his films have received a single honor by a major film recognition/preservation institution.Despite Freaks strong American box office opening, it was soon yanked (after two weeks) and banned pretty much worldwide for the next fifty years. Freaks was much written about throughout the 1960s and 1970s. With the advent of the video market in the 1980s, the time was ripe for rediscovery.Does Freaks live up to its reputation? That depends solely on perspective. That it is a masterful vision and labor of love from the most authentically unusual artist to emerge from the Hollywood system is of little doubt. If one approaches Freaks expecting it to be in line with the "classic horror" mold films of the 1930's, however,then one is apt to be disappointed. Despite the misguided marketing strategies of the studio, or Blockbuster styled category labeling, Freaks is not a "horror" film in the normal understanding of the word. Aptly, it is a horrifying film in the abnormal sense, for it is the horrifying, normal people who intend to murder for money. Freaks is an unsettling vision and that is the only description one can give to it, genres be damned.That Browning used actual carnival freaks, as opposed to "real" actors, certainly killed what little chance the film had for box office potential. Myrna Loy and Jena Harlow were among the actresses MGM attempted to obtain for the lead. Not surprisingly, neither of these tinsel town types would touch it.The most unsettling thing about Freaks is in its unflinching turning of the table. For Browning it is the beautiful ones who are the freaks and the freaks who are the beautiful ones. That the freaks are not professional actors is blatantly obvious from the outset, yet they ring far more authentic than the professionals in the film and, indeed many Hollywood actors of the period. The glamorous acting of countless actors in the thirties rings far more false, and is far less memorable. Of course, little has changed. The pinheads exude a unique substance and spiritual ethos that one could never gleam from Hollywood's fashion plate, which has consistently confused fashion with style.As in Browning's Dracula, it is clear that the director's interest lies in developing the perennial outsider. The "normal" characters in Freaks seem under-developed, which may have been Browning's choice, or character development may have been lost in Thalberg's merciless excising of nearly a half hour of footage. The tacked on happy ending has been debated since its release. It does not work and comes off as a diluted afterthought.Olga Baclanova plays Cleopatra, the beautiful trapeze artist who dwarf Hans, played by Henry Earles, falls in love with. We know her fate from the outset, which mutes the potential for much needed suspense. Cleopatra is merely using Hans for his wealth while she carries on a not so secretive affair with Henry Victor's Hercules. Frieda, Hans' pre-Cleopatra fiancée, is played by Harry's sister, Daisy Earles, and she sees through the scheming of Cleopatra and Hercules.This is a very slow moving build up. Ironically, Browning, having been accused of exploiting the freaks by critics who simply don't have the guts to readily admit that they just don't want to see them, only shows the freaks in their natural, behind the scene, daily environment. Browning never resorts to showing the freaks on stage or in performance. Instead, he shows these physical mishaps in reality checks, doing everyday things we would do, such as smoking a cigarette.Foolishly, Hans does not listen to Frieda's warnings and marries Cleopatra. The wedding banquet scene is still among the most discussed moments of Freaks. The freaks chant "Gooble, gobble. We accept her, we accept her. One of us." They lift their bowl of wine in acceptance of Cleopatra as a fellow freak and Cleopatra does a freak out. She douses them with the wine, calls them filthy freaks and, with Hercules, mocks her new husband.Cleopatra is slowly poisoning Hans. Hans and his community know it, and plan retaliation. The sequence is beautifully filmed by Browning. The culprits are exposed in the back of a wagon, deep in the night, during a thunderstorm. Browning's critics have accused him of demonizing the freaks here. Quite the contrary, Browning empowers his misfits and, in communal effort, they exact a terrifying revenge on an abusive, hostile and normal society who forever has branded them as freaks.Theologian Hans Kung rightly has said that visionary John XXIII will never be canonized by the institution. Visionaries never are canonized by institutions or institutional types. Kung adds that this matters little since those who appreciate and understand vision have already canonized him.The same could be said for Tod Browning. It matters little if the Academy Awards,the American Film Institute or by-the-numbers critics pay him due or not. The visionaries canonized him a long time ago.* MY REVIEW WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED AT 366 WEIRD MOVIES
L**O
Banned in Boston, "Freaks" is Tod Browning's best film
For years I had heard about the legendary Tod Browning film "Freaks" that so upset audiences it was banned in Boston and Great Britain. I had read the short story "Spurs" on which it was based and when the film was finally screened on campus I talked my roommate into going with me. Most of the people sitting around us knew nothing about the film and when I told them about it everybody started to get nervous. Then the film began...and we all loved it! My roommate and I both had crushes on Daisy Earles who plays Frieda in the film, opposite her brother Harry as Hans (for years I thought they were really husband and wife; my mistake). The story is quite simple: Hans and Frieda are a pair of midgets in love, but Hans thinks that Cleopatra (Olga Baclanova) the bareback rider is beautiful. Cleopatra plays with Hans' affections until she learns he has money. Over the objections of her boyfriend, Hercules (Henry Victor) the freak show strongman, she accepts Hans' proposal. During the wedding feast when the freaks accept her into their ranks, she makes it clear how much she despises them all. But when Hans starts to become ill because of the poison she is feeding him, the freaks decide it is time to take matters into their own hands. The film's climax, when the freaks chase Cleopatra and Hercules during a rainstorm, is truly chilling, although Cleopatra's final fate is as unreal as it is ironic and was supposed to be even worse. But the scene of Hercules singing soprano in Madame Tetralini's new sideshow because he had been castrated was found to be too intense for early audiences and was cut. All Browning really did to terrify audience was to include real freaks in his film, such as Daisy and Violet Hilton the Siamese Twins, Schlitze the Pinhead Girl, Josephine Joseph the Half-Woman/Half-Man, Johnny Eck the Half Boy, Frances O'Connor the Turtle Girl, Peter Robinson the Living Human Skeleton, Olga Roderick the Bearded Lady, Koo Koo the Bird Girl, Martha Morris the Armless Wonder, and Randion the Living Torso, who rolls his own cigarettes despite having neither arms nor legs. The original short story "Spurs" by Tod Robbins had a midget falling for a bareback rider who marries him for his money and at their wedding feast puts her husband on her shoulders and boasts that she will carry him across France. With the aid of his large, angry dog he forces her to do just that. Browning's film expands the scope of the story into something more complex and much more satisfying. However, the film clearly portrays the "Freaks" with dignity. As Madame Tetrallini (Rose Dione) tells someone, "These are all God's children." The true monsters in this film are the "normal" human beings, who receive their just desserts. But when "Freaks" was relased it was banned in the United Kingdom for thirty years (and is still banned in Sweden). During that period Browning was blackballed in Hollywood. He had promised MGM the ultimate scary movie and given the reaction you have to conclude that he delivered. The film was originally intended to have what we would now consider an A-List cast with Victor McLaglen as Hercules, Myrna Loy as Cleopatra, and Jean Harlow as Venus. However, all of the stars reportedly balked at the prospect being in a film with "sideshow exhibitions." This 1932 film is clearly Browning's best film, vastly superior to the more famous "Dracula," which, after all, was basically a filmed stage play for the most part. It is not even close. You might screen this film for the first time because of its reputation, but you will watch it again because it is a pretty good film, especially given the time at which it was made.
V**.
Four Stars
okay
B**S
Film splendido
Sulla cattiveria e l'intolleranza che spesso si annida nelle persone cosiddette "normali", che hanno in odio i diversi e che volentieri si accaniscono contro i più deboli. Ma quando i diversi e deboli, discriminati ed angariati, organizzano la loro vendetta, allora... Una parabola anche per i nostri tempi. Come Tod Browning abbia fatto a realizzare un film del genere all'inizio degli anni 30 resta per me un mistero: genio assoluto!
F**O
“Freaks” (Tod Browning)
“Freaks” (Stati Uniti d’America, 1932), film diretto dal regista statunitense Tod Browning. Ambientato nel mondo del circo ed interpretato da veri e propri freaks, non creati con trucchi in studio, i cosiddetti “fenomeni da baraccone”, è considerato uno dei più grandi cult movie di sempre, nonché un classico del genere macabro. Un vero e proprio film “maledetto” che sconvolge lo spettatore, stimolandolo anche a una riflessione sulla mostruosità morale dell’uomo normale... Assolutamente consigliato!
S**O
IL FILM PIU' CORAGGIOSO DI SEMPRE
Un capolavoro, un film geniale e coraggioso, commovente e meraviglioso.Ci vuole tanto, tanto talento ed ardimento per dirigere un film così.Il messaggio e forte e senza appello, i veri mostri possono essere persone apaprentemente normali.Temi quantomai attuali, scene (quella del matrimonio -ad esempio- ma non è l'unica) che hanno fatto la storia del cinema.Il tempo è volato via leggero per questo film, che mantinene la sua potenza comunicativa ancora intatta a più di ottant'anni dalla sua realizzazione.
S**2
Excellent !
Je ne m'attendais pas à si bien. Les acteurs particuliers qu'on appelle "monstres" ont de vrais rôles avec de vrais dialogues. C'est un excellement film très bien tourné. Le seul regret, c'est que l'on ne voie pas assez les spécificités de certains acteurs qui, malgré leur lourd handicap, savaient faire des prouesses dans la vie quotidienne. Par exemple l'homme tronc qui savait rouler une cigarette juste avec sa bouche. Dans le film on le voit "seulement" allumer sa cigarette en craquant une allumette. C'est impressionnant ! Et on apprend en bonus, qu'il était marié et avait un fils...!
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 months ago