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Freaks

Posted : 5 years, 4 months ago on 25 December 2018 02:28

Freaks was Tod Browning’s passion project. His earliest work on the project can be traced back to 1927, and it’s something of a miracle it got made at all. It’s an even bigger miracle that MGM didn’t bury this thing after the horrific first reactions and heavy editing involved.

 

It’s tantalizing to think about the film that Freaks might have been, but what emerges as you watch it is a sense that is unclassifiable film is still a masterpiece. It’s nearly impossible to wrap your brain around the prestige and glamour of MGM having produced this humane, sympathetic, and yes, scary film. Was wunderkind producer Irving Thalberg merely trying to recreate the box office and magic of Dracula and Frankenstein? Probably, but boy did he get something wholly different.

 

Browning has compassion and empathy for those dubbed “freaks,” and he works to humanize them throughout. This point-of-view, spoken aloud by Wallace Ford and Leila Hyams, reflects Browning’s own history as it spent a great deal of time traveling the country in a circus during the late 1800s. If you’ve ever wondered why so many of Browning’s best known films involve circuses and their performers, why they’re so routinely conscious of their struggles and desires, then this bit of biographical trivia will fill in that blank.

 

Freaks is of a piece with his other works like The Unknown, another tortured love story in a circus with horror undertones. These films spend a great deal of time examining the minutia of a performer’s daily life, and we begin to identify with them as people before the curious and troubling story beats kick in. The brief running time of Freaks means that this sympathy is essential for the complicated emotions of the ending to work.

 

The story finds Hans, one of the little people in the sideshow, falling in love with the trapeze artist Cleopatra. Cleopatra is carrying on an affair with Hercules the strongman, but indulges Hans’ affections because of his immense wealth. Once she realizes that she can get a few things out of him with coy flirtations and touching, she decides to up the ante by marrying and then poisoning him. Once the rest of the sideshow learns of her horrifying actions they devise a plan to protect their own and save Hans.

 

It is in the final moments of this twisted courtship that Freaks pulls away from “slice of life” scenes and into more atmospheric, terrifying territory. Everyone knows the two biggest set pieces of this section of the movie, the wedding scene and the rainy night revenge. The wedding scene is a scene that transforms the film from something akin to cinema verite towards the shadowy, hallucinatory aesthetic of the Universal Monsters. The sideshow performers announce their intention to accept Cleopatra as one of them and pass around the “loving cup,” but soon Cleopatra and Hercules erupt in scornful mocking of the entire scene.

 

That scornful eruption underscores much of what makes Freaks such an essential masterpiece: for all of their physical disabilities or deformities, these circus freaks contain the same wants and dreams as the rest of the us, and it’s the characters whose compromised morality and inability to see their humanity that emerge as the true monsters/freaks of the film. Cleopatra and Hercules may be attractive and capable of passing through society unnoticed or commented upon, but their hearts are twisted things incapable of connection or empathy with anyone not exactly like them.

 

The destructive harm these two threaten to the circus means that something must come around to right the wrongs. I mean, that’s just basic horror movie morality play at work. Whatever is coming about to disrupt the stasis, be it a werewolf or stalking serial killer, it must eventually be expunged. This leads us the rainy night revenge scene.

 

This is probably Freaks’ must outright concession to a being a horror movie. The intolerance of Cleopatra and Hercules must be snuffed out, and the thunderstorm, mud, and hinted at violence of this make it truly unnerving. This is the most exploitative moment, probably the only one in the film, that finds many of the less mobile sideshow performers slowly crawling towards a frantic Cleopatra and Hercules. What exactly happens to Hercules is a mystery, but Cleopatra’s fate ties into the carnival barker introduction in a neat little bow.

 

First reactions to this film found its viewing audience siding more with Cleopatra than Phroso or Venus, a circus clown and seal trainer that meet the freaks as equals and react with disgust at their mistreatment. MGM removed about thirty minutes from the running time, leaving Freaks at a little over an hour, and couldn’t figure out an ending. They eventually settled on a happy coda that finds Hans reunited with Phroso, Venus, and Frieda, Hans’ original fiancée and a fellow little person in the circus sideshow. It’s a strange beat to end on and something of tonal whiplash after the violence of the prior scene, yet it doesn’t harm in the film in any material way. What emerges in the end is a sense that Freaks is a compassionate film buried beneath a label of “horror” and a complicated history that serves as an anchor around its neck.  



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Freaks review

Posted : 7 years, 6 months ago on 7 October 2016 06:52

It's time for another classic Tod Browning film. This one is actually considered to be quite good. Although it is another one that is considered a little controversial. It's mostly due to the fact that it's a story ahead of its time. I recently watched American Horror Story that shares many ideas from this. I figured I should definitely go ahead and finally watch it for my Horrorthon of 2016. I have only heard of some films from most of the writers. Edgar Allan Woolf is the only one I have seen a movie from with The Wizard of Oz. This is going to be a very short watch at barely a few minutes over an hour. Anyways it's time to see the legend. Hopefully this goes better than my Dracula experience.

This was actually pretty darn good. Unlike Dracula this actually captivated me. I do think the missing footage slightly dampens the experience, but not by much. I am definitely curious as to what happened in those twenty plus minutes they had to dispose of. I mean it could have been pretty tame by today's standards. Anyways it's nice to see where horror came from. I also think there were bits of subplot that were kind of spoiled by that. Some things were never remarked on again. I like the little bits of comedy that were here. I have seen a lot of homage of this in AHS Freakshow. The crawling in the mud scene was actually pretty disturbing and well done. That scene and the dinner scene have to be some of the most iconic moments of the whole thing. The reveal at the end was quite insane. I wonder how they made that possible! I like that this is another of the type of stories where you learn that "normal" people are the ones who are the problem.

I really enjoyed the characters here. Even the acting is fairly good from everyone. I do wish some people had bigger roles. They probably did in the disposed of footage. I like that they tend to make these people as very sympathetic and likable. If they had made them unlikable then I could see why this had so much hate. I personally thought they were well respected besides of course what they end up doing.

I'm glad this actually proved to still be a good movie. I wish it was in it's entirety though. I think the disposed of film possibly took away from some subplots. I'm also just genuinely curious about what they had to give up. I liked the characters and I thought the acting was pretty decent given the time period. The message it gives it clear that the "Freaks" are the people who bash others for being different. It has some great iconic moments with a fantastic ending. It was definitely worth finally watching. I would recommend others to do the same.


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Freaks review

Posted : 10 years ago on 23 April 2014 11:11

Let me tell you right from the off, that I am a fan of most movies which aim to rattle cages, push the boundaries and force audiences to ask themselves what they find acceptable.
1932's “Freaks” is just such a movie. It was made to cash in on the horror surge of the time, following smash hits like Dracula, of which, “Freaks” helmsman, Tod Browning, was the director.
Browning promised the studio 'the ultimate scary movie', and he delivered big time. As a matter of fact, the picture, which cast genuine circus and side-show performers, only had a brief run in cinemas, as it was met with genuine horror and disgust from audiences. In these, more enlightened times, the feeling people get from watching the film is more one of interest.
If I have a problem with the film, it's not the cast, or the title (though, it does make me cringe slightly), it's that Browning is obviously not sure as to how he wants to present the performers. For most of the movie, they are represented as sympathetic characters, but in one scene, they are depicted more as creatures, as they crawl in the mud.
My favourite part of the film is the ending, when the gold-digging trapeze artist is taught a lesson in the harshest of ways, and it plays like the punchline to the blackest of jokes.


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Monsters Mash #11 Freaks

Posted : 11 years, 7 months ago on 26 September 2012 10:52

This one is a little hard to talk about is about real sideshow performers literally real sideshow performers . The plot tells the story of a little person named Han (played by sideshow performer Harry Earles who played a lollipop guild in The Wizard of Oz) who's marry to a big person named Cleopatra but she just a big b***h! all she want is his money. The thing about this horror movie is not really all that a horror movie until the freaks band together to punish Cleopatra the movie was directed by Tod Browning the same guy that directed Dracula he specially cast his actors (hence that these were real sideshow performer) where else do you see a guy that can walk with no legs? or a guy with no limbs that lit a cigarette for 1932 it was controversial at the time many it was banned for more than 40 years after Tod Browning's death many people thought it was an insult to people with physical deformities. And with a title called "Freaks" how could you not go wrong it wasn't until many years later that people saw what it's really about the normal people are the monsters Freaks is a great film the only problem was it just ahead of it times.


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An unique picture

Posted : 13 years, 2 months ago on 28 February 2011 09:10

I wasn’t sure what to expect from this movie but since it has a solid reputation, I was quite eager to check it out. Eventually,  I have to admit that I was quite blown away by the damned thing. Seriously, I had never seen anything like this before and, while watching this movie,  I was really wondering why they never made more movies about this subject. The problem, if they would make a similar movie nowadays, if it would be fake, it wouldn’t really work but, if it would be for real, then most people would be probably outraged by the damned thing. Basically, this movie was made more than 80 years ago, when the movie technics were maybe not as elaborate as they are today but, on the other hand, there were no real ‘rules’ or actual censorship so the movie makers could still make pretty much whatever they wanted and get away with anything without much trouble. Coming back to our main feature, after all these years, it is still a really weird movie but, somehow, I think its 'weirdness' was actually positive, in spite of its controversial subject. Anyway, to conclude, it is a real classic and pretty much a must-see for any decent film lover.



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Freaks review

Posted : 13 years, 7 months ago on 2 October 2010 11:32

Freaks is a cult-classic for obvious reasons that tight-rope walks a fine line between exploitation and authentic story-telling. At times it veers too heavily toward sensationalistic self-indulgence or misplaced sympathy/false nobility, while at others it strikes an earnest tone, providing a complex study of human behavior at its best and worst. Anyway you slice it, the film ultimately suffers because of its failure to reach a coherent underlying identity. Equally unfortunate is the fact that there's no chance of the performances redeeming the shortcoming of the script. Most of the major players are not actors, reflected quite obviously by their performances. This is not a criticism, only an observation of the difficulty inherent to making a too often unmoving story moving without the benefit of top-notch talent. Personally I found it difficult to become engrossed in a story that the story-tellers seemed ambivalent about. See it if you're one of those people like me who insists on witnessing ground-breaking achievements in cinema, but otherwise don't go out of your way.


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Can a full grown woman truly love a MIDGET?

Posted : 14 years, 6 months ago on 3 October 2009 04:54

A Classic horror movie to say the least, one of the few brought out in the early 1900's to compete and win against most movies that came out recently, this year even. No special effects were involved in this movie, just humans with deformities under the direction of fellow side show freak, Tod Browning. Watching the special features on this movie shows alot of information, including that Tod Browning himself belonged to a sideshow, and knew some of the stars personally. It was one of the strangest films to date made by an American, showing physical anomalies on camera for one of the first times in cinematic history; all of the stars special and truly unique it their own way. The story focuses on a tiny man named Hans who falls for a trapeze artist named Cleopatra, who attempts to marry him and poison him; to then be left with his fortune and live happily ever after. Mistaking his kindness for weakness, Cleopatra surrounds Hans in the thought that she wants to be with him, yet Hans’ wife (who is actually his sister is real life) sees past it, as do some of the other performers. Seeing the two together on the screen when the film debuted really caused a stir in the film industry as well as society, as no type of a couple like this had ever been imagined, let alone shot on film. As the movie plays on, and the trap becomes set, many of the freaks sees Hans happy so they decide to accept her as one of them during their wedding; even though she has no deformities and has politically correct stick up her ass. After her poor behavior (kissing another man at the wedding) and sudden attitude change in front of Hans’ family of performers (screaming and badmouthing all of them when asked to drink from the same cup they all drank out of), the freaks decide it is time to take action against the woman plotting against their friend. The conclusion of this film was one that stuck with me, everything was just perfect as far as atmosphere, whether conditions, and overall fear put into shooting it. In the 62 minutes of the film, as promised; she became one of them.. To say the least!

Frieda: I was saying, tonight you must not smoke such a big cigar. Your voice was very bad at tonight's show.
Hans: Please, Frieda, don't tell me what I do. When I want a cigar, I smoke a cigar. I want no orders from a woman.


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