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The Unknown
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Directed by Tod Browning.
As a group, the silent-movie collaborations between director Tod Browning and star Lon Chaney hardly represent the best work of either man, though each film definitely has its moments. One of the best, and weirdest, of the batch is The Unknown. Chaney plays a carnival performer known as the "Armless Wonder," who performs near-miraculous stunts with his bare feet. In fact, he is in possession of both his arms, but keeps them strapped to his side to maintain the illusion of being limbless. Chaney's beautiful assistant Joan Crawford has a pathological fear of being touched by any man. This leads Chaney to believe that he is attractive to Crawford so long as his keeps his arms hidden. Halfway through the film, Chaney murders the circus manager--a crime witnessed by Crawford, who was only able to glimpse Chaney's distinctively mutated thumb. To cover up his crime, and to make himself the perfect mate for Crawford, Chaney blackmails a doctor into amputating his arms. Upon returning to the carnival, the now-genuinely armless Chaney learns to his horror that Crawford has overcome her aberration of being touched, thanks to handsome circus strong man Norman Kerry. Enraged, Chaney plots to kill Kerry in a horrible fashion...but guess who ends up seriously dead? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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RisseladaRisselada Movie year countdown viewing pr ...
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
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"This is a list for Round 2 of my movie year countdown viewing project as first described here. If by any strange chance whoever is reading this is actually following along you may notice that I'm still less than two thirds of the way through my original one. Well I'm starting this new one because as much as I love old movies it can get a little tedious watching just older movies. So I'm going to be blending my watching of the two lists together. Still focusing on the original one, but every once in a while sliding in the next entry from this new list.Again these new movies are limited to full length movies that are available on Netflix. And for this new round instead of picking a movie from every year, I will be picking a movie from every two years. For example the first movie must have come out during 2006 or 2007. The second movie must have come out in 2004 or 2005. The next in 2002 or 2003. You see.The list is not finished yet, but here is what I have decide ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Only the silent cinema could have created such a bizarre but at the same time thoroughly believable and engrossing portrait of doomed love as The Unknown. If Lon Chaney had been able to put his feelings into words, or if Joan Crawford's strange phobia concerning male appendages had been audibly discussed, The Unknown would probably have been laughed off the screen. But in the more ethereal atmosphere of the mute theater, such florid behavior seems acceptable, perhaps even logical. Chaney was never better than when under the direction of director Tod Browning, who once again drew mightily on his own carnival background to create a world that both fascinates and repels. The reviewers at the time were often more repelled than fascinated, the prudish Harrison's Reports denouncing the Chaney-Browning morality play as "a gruesome and unpleasant picture." And The Unknown may actually still be capable of shocking even a modern audience raised on truly gruesome and unpleasant pictures. Not with blood and gore -- there isn't any -- but by the mere idea of a man willing to sacrifice his limbs for the sake of an overpowering desire. It is a cruel joke screenwriter Waldemar Young pulled on Lon Chaney, however. For the fickle Miss Crawford readily overcomes her bizarre phobia once she discovers that being embraced by Norman Kerry isn't all that bad after all. But then it is all too late for Mr. Chaney's beast, who once again is slain by beauty. To flesh out his demented sideshow attraction, Chaney was offered a bit of assistance from armless wonder Dismuki. Drafted from the Al G. Barnes Circus and Sideshow, this real-life "freak" supplied Chaney's nimble footwork and would later bill himself "The Man Who Doubled Lon Chaney's Feet." Still and all, it is Chaney's intense personality more than his feet or supposedly missing limbs that demands our attention and the role becomes yet another fascinating tour-de-force for an actor who truly deserves his more recent re-discovery. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
 



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