FREAKS: Tod Browning's Sideshow Shockers (MGM, 1925, 27, 32) Criterion

Suitably referenced as the Edgar Allen Poe of American cinema, director, Tod Browning’s legendary run in Hollywood yielded some stimulating specimens in ground-breaking pre-code films, later bludgeoned in the editing room until some bore no earthly resemblance to his original vision. Even under Tinsel Town’s then ‘laissez fair’ approach to making movies, it seems Browning’s propensity for perversity was oft frowned upon as pushing the boundaries of acceptable screen ‘art’ too far into the grotesque. From his earliest days as a Vaudeville performer and carnie/circus entertainer, Browning was unreservedly captivated by the dodgy ambiance of these traveling sideshows. Indeed, Browning regarded this world, with its’ non-judgmental charm, as a refreshing departure from the straight-jacketed conformity dictating social mores and manners elsewhere. Today, Tod Browning remains much regarded in American cinema for two enduring early sound masterworks – Universal’s Dracula (1931) and Freaks (1932) – curiously made at MGM, a studio not in tune with Browning’s particular verve for humanity’s oddities.

At age 16, Browning left school, abjuring the affluence of his ancestral family, to become a roustabout. By age 21, he was performing on a riverboat, acting as a contortionist for Ringling Brothers, having developed a live ‘burial’ act – his first departure into the macabre. Born, Charles Albert Browning, he adopted ‘tod’ as his first name, believing its derivation from the German, meaning - ‘death’ – added darkly purposed cache to his marquee presence. In 1909, Browning came to the movies as an actor. Barely 4 years later, he was directing for D. W. Griffith at Biograph Studios in New York City, marking 2-reelers he had also written and produced. A near-death collision with a train while under the influence, resulting in the death of one of his passengers, sobered up Browning. It also altered the trajectory of his tastes in cinema, now skewed toward morality plays in which criminals or the physically deformed became the heroes of his stories. To some extent, Browning’s movies became formulaic with time, fueling his neurotic fixation with sexual frustration and substitutable conscience – the quagmire afflicting all human self-loathing and desirability.

From 1925 to 1929, Browning indulged his talents at MGM under the auspices of Irving Thalberg, finding his muse in Lon Chaney, the studio’s most celebrated ‘man of a thousand faces.’ All 8 of the Browning/Chaney collaborations proved highly successful – one of them, presented for consideration in Criterion’s triumvirate of Metro horror classics: The Unknown (1927).  Prior to this, Browning made The Mystic (1925) for MGM, a bizarre tale of a triumvirate of reprobates out to bilk rich clientele by ‘supposedly’ channeling the spirits of the dead through a medium. Given its title, the movie is actually far less interested in the occult or the supernatural – even in debunking it – than the perverted manipulations of an audience having paid for the luxury to believe in the impossible. For several years thereafter, Browning would embark upon a string of legendary pictures, one of them – London After Midnight (1926), no longer believed to exist. The following year, Browning unleashed The Unknown (1927), arguably his masterpiece with Chaney as his star. It told the wicked tale of a cruel and obsessive love affair, nearly to destroy the happiness of a carnival performer, Nanon (played by an up-and-coming Joan Crawford at her most luminous and alluring).

In it, Chaney is Alonzo, a gypsy/knife-wielding circus performer, feigning the loss of both his arms in an accident prior to joining their show. Chaney, who, of course had arms, herein uses his feet, not only to perform Alonzo’s act, but also convincingly to light cigarettes and strum his guitar. In reality, Alonzo is concealing his arms under a heavy cloak to placate Nanon’s odd aversion at being touched. This is credited to the abuse Nanon endured at the hands of her father, ringmaster - Zanzi (Nick De Ruiz), whom Alonzo later murders. However, Nanon still does not wish a sexual relationship with any man. So, Alonzo, to please and possess her, secretly has his limbs amputated, erroneously believing this will draw him nearer to her sexually. Alas, upon his recovery, Alonzo discovers Nanon has since overcome her fear of intimacy to take up with circus strongman, Malabar (Norman Kerry), whom Alonzo now plots to destroy. Fate intervenes, and Alonzo is instead trampled to death by his own wickedness, allowing Nanon and Malabar to live happily ever after.

The Unknown was Browning’s most successful collaboration with Chaney, and one of MGM’s brightest money-makers of the year. From this golden epoch, Browning’s reputation would swiftly rise and endure, but a scant 4 more years before his undoing with what would ultimately become his most scandalous – yet enduring – masterwork: Freaks (1932). Just prior to its debut, Browning had achieved his ultimate success with Dracula (1931) – the picture to kickstart Universal’s cycle into horror classics to see out the remainder of the thirties, only to be bastardized in recycled and increasingly silly monster mash-ups at Universal throughout the 1940’s. Based on the success of Dracula, Irving Thalberg was eager to woo Browning to MGM, and accepted his rough-draft story proposal based loosely on Tod Robbins' circus-themed short story - Spurs (1926). Alas, the rechristened Freaks would quickly unravel into a ravishing oddity; Browning, importing all manner of legitimate sideshow performers whose grotesque physical deformities became the bane of the studio’s ‘legit’ stars’ existence. Studio raja, Louis B. Mayer strenuously objected. Thalberg, however, persisted.

Once again, Browning’s focus is on a morality play. Freaks is the tale of a midget/circus performer, Hans (Harry Earles), systematically being poisoned by statuesque, high-wire artiste, Cleopatra (Olga Baclanova), who feigns an attraction to Hans but is actually engaging in after-hours badinage with the show’s strongman, Hercules (Henry Victor). Together, Cleo and Herc’ conspire to do away with Hans who hails from moneyed ancestry, thereupon to live handsomely off his considerable wealth. Hans refuses to believe Cleo would so callously betray him. Despite the protestations of fellow midget, Frieda (actually, Harry’s real-life wife, Daisy Earles), Hans allows Cleo some latitude to carry out her diabolical plan. At some point, however, Hans deduces Freida and the rest of the freaks have his best interests at heart. Catching Cleo in her deception, Hans and the freaks hunt down Cleo and Herc’ one dark and stormy night. They emasculate the strongman, performing a home-made castration, and, brutalize Cleo, whose legs and tongue are amputated, transforming her into the chicken woman – the ultimate sideshow freak, tarred and feathered, and, desperately clucking to be heard by an audience only come to gawk at her grotesque transformation.

Even for film audiences previously fascinated by such maladies of the flesh, Freaks proved too much to handle. Reportedly, at a sneak peek, some members of the prevue audience were made physically ill, while others stormed out of the theater to register their disgust. Apoplectic, Browning agreed to make the necessary ‘trims’ to create a more ‘mainstream’ appeal for the general release. However, by the time Freaks hit the theater circuit it had lost more than 30-minutes, hacked away to eliminate virtually all the major chills and pivotal plot twists, including the penultimate ruin of Hercules and Cleopatra. Only a glimpse of the post-operative Cleo, clucking in her pen survived these cuts. The fate of Hercules would remain unknown, though speculated upon for decades to follow. Regardless, Freaks was an unmitigated box office disaster, hastening the loss of Tod Browning’s autonomy to further explore his thematic frustrations on the screen. Not only at MGM, Browning would soon discover he had fast become persona non grata in Hollywood.

Still under contract, Browning had only 4 more pictures to contribute to his canon, each systematically blunted in the editing process and judged as inferior ghost flowers to his earlier period of prosperity. In 1939, Browning was forced into retirement after 46 movies of vary degrees in quality.  With the coming of the second world war, his macabre sensibilities rapidly fell out of fashion. After all, there were too many real horrors to contend with in the world. And MGM, upon the installation of Hollywood’s self-governing code of ethics, by the mid-1930’s had moved away from its aspirations to compete with Universal’s home-grown Transylvania. Instead, Mayer indulged in pictures built upon a superficial sheen of glamor, marked by considerable prestige. And thus, Browning was virtually blackballed in Hollywood. With the death of his beloved wife in 1944, he became a virtual recluse in his Malibu Beach house, trundled out by Hollywood’s rather perverse display of belated philanthropy for 1949’s prestigious ‘Directors Guild’ award. For the next 20 years, Browning and his reputation were allowed to molder with the past. Failed surgery performed in 1962 to remove cancer from his larynx rendered him mute. He died of the disease later that same year.

In the intervening decades, Browning’s reputation has been resurrected, mostly by cinema surrealists, finding something genuinely disturbing, yet sympathetic in Browning’s darkly purposed morality melodramas. Given this renewed fascination with the man and his work, it is a bit of an oddity itself that, so far, only 3 of his works have come back into the light – remastered in hi-def, but farmed out by their current rights holder, Warner Brothers, to Criterion for this new-to-Blu release. The Mystic, The Unknown and Freaks have not weathered well at all. Through improper storage, decades of general neglect, and ultimately, a lack of preservation efforts until much of what survives is only rough-hewn source material, truncated and cobbled together from 16 and 35mm prints, the level of mastering quality in this Blu-ray set ranges from admirable to disappointing. Of the 3 movies, only Freaks rises to a level of true preservation/restoration. When the image is culled from 35mm elements (no original negative survives), the results can be quite pleasing, with rich, solid black levels, a good representation of fine details, and film grain accurately preserved to resemble an original nitrate print. Alas, image quality toggles between this, and very ugly, muddy and overly-contrasted 16mm elements, inserted into the movie to bring back some – if not all – of what Browning was forced to excise from it in 1932.

The Unknown offers the second-best image in this set; the restoration performed by George Eastman and a Polish archive with elements culled from the best surviving nitrates found in America and Italy. General wear, streaks, mold damage, badly spliced jump cuts, sprocket wear, scratches and dirt have not been removed. So, the image is in fairly rough shape, occasionally to exhibit grave instability and, again, a general softening when 16mm elements are briefly inserted to bridge the absences of surviving 35mm stock. The absolute worst rendering in this set is owed The Mystic – a movie, virtually unseen since its theatrical debut and never available on any home video format. Regrettably, this Blu-ray is NOT cause for celebration. Much of the image is affected by the aforementioned age-related anomalies. Those are forgivable…to a point. Wholly unforgivable – the aliasing, edge enhancement and other digitally based distortions that cause the entire feature to suffer from an effect that comes close to the bad-old-days of digital combing, a persistent duplication of the image, creating a VERY distracting effect. All three films in this set are derived from 2K scans and sport Criterion’s usual 1.0 PCM soundtrack. The silent features have musical accompaniment. The Mystic actually gets a new score by Dean Hurley; The Unknown, by Philip Carli. Freaks’ early sound recording exhibits all of the shortcomings of primitive Westrex.

Criterion has padded out the goodies on Freaks and The Unknown with audio commentaries by David Skal. The Mystic only rates an intro by Skal. Megan Abbott weighs in, in a newly produced featurette on Browning and pre-Code horror. Also curated for our pleasure, the vintage hour-long doc on Freaks, featuring various perspectives on the movie and its enduring importance. From 2019, we get Kristen Lopez’s podcast on Freaks. Skal returns to read ‘Spurs’. There’s also a prologue and alternate endings and a photo gallery for Freaks. Finally, historian, Farran Smith Nehme contributes a printed essay. Bottom line: what survives of Browning’s storied past in Hollywood is, regrettably, crumbs off a much more well-appointed table of oddities still MIA on home video.  Some will never be seen again, owing to their complete disintegration over time. But others are still moldering in vaults around the world, and deserve to be unearthed before it is too late. Criterion’s triumvirate from Browning’s catalog is a start, alas, with only 2 movies in it, watchable. The Mystic’s quality – or lack thereof - is an utter waste of your time. Judge and buy accordingly.

FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)

The Mystic - 3

The Unknown – 4.5

Freaks – 4

VIDEO/AUDIO

The Mystic – 1

The Unknown – 2.5

Freaks – 3.5

EXTRAS

3

 

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