"…weird, fantastic, adequately suspensive, and
shivery…”
Lawrence Reid, Motion Picture News
Of the thousands of silent films lost this is one of
those that was found, having been considered "perhaps the most elusive of
lost films”, by critic Carlos Clarens before being rediscovered restored and
shown on TCM and released on Warner Classics DVD a decade ago. This project is
based on a 16mm black and white source from a private collection and whilst it
doesn’t have the DVD’s tints, it’s pretty much the same cut as far as I can
tell. This is the first time that the film has been released on Blu-ray and is
the result of a Kickstarter from Redwood Creek Films who conducted a 4k
transfer and restoration of the materials.
The film is new to me although I have some familiarity
with the work of Rex Ingram and The Magician is notable not just for its
mystery and imagination but also its location having been filmed in France with
shots featuring Monte Carlo and Paris. Carlos Clarens explains this as a means
of avoiding studio interference, and given how he sums up the response on
release as mostly on grounds of tastelessness, it’s easy to see why Ingram
wanted time alone with his monstrous creation.
In addition to an international cast there’s also a
British connection with young Michael Powell, often resident in the South of
France, acting as an assistant director as well as an extra in one brief
appearance. This cast include Ingram’s wife, Alice Terry, as well as sundry
Frenchmen and the wide-eyed stylings of Herr Paul Wegener who, as one of the
characters observes, looks like he’s stepped out of a melodrama. Paul gets the
job done though and his magically-unreal mad Professor Haddo is a joy whether
he’s hypnotising Alice, inexplicably influencing the tables at the casino or
plotting ancient magic. Powell was not impressed though saying his "one
expression to indicate magical powers was to open his huge eyes even wider,
until he looked about as frightened as a bullfrog." Maybe you had to be
there.
Michael Powell and Gladys Hamer
The script is based on a 1908 novel by W. Somerset
Maugham, as unlikely as it seems, and is characterised by an uncanny intensity
mixed with some humorous episodes that serve to both relive and build up the
eventual tension. This is Todd Browning strange and proto-Universal odd, with
the seemingly unstoppable Haddo plotting murder and the most gruesome recycling
of human flesh… there really ought to be some kind of cinema code to restrict
the horrific imaginations of these debauched show people.
All begins artistically enough with sculptor Margaret
Dauncey (Alice Terry) moulding a huge clay statue of Pan which is of such a
scale that I really doubt she’ll be able to get it out of the room. Also
present is Margaret's painter friend Susie Boyd (Gladys Hamer) who provides the
first moments of light relief as she changes the title of an abstract painting
from sunrise to sunset over the Seine.
I was right about the scale of the work though for the
clay suddenly cracks and the giant head falls onto Margaret threatening more
than just her promising career. Her spine damaged only the state-of-the-art
intervention of handsome surgeon Dr. Arthur Burdon (Iván Petrovich) saves her with
an onlooking doctor praising his skill as almost magical.
The saving of a human life is a comparatively simple
matter. On the other hand, the scientific creation of life does indeed call for
the powers of a magician.
Paul Wegener keeps it real. |
Also watching – really, really, wide-eyed – is Professor
Haddo, who plans on actual magic, and more, with this most attractive of
patients. The operating theatre is the strangest of places to pick up potential
subjects for hypnotism and heart donation but it’s the early worm who catches
the worm even though Margaret and Dr, Arthur soon begin a romance. Haddo
meanwhile discovers the rare recipe for creating life in his local library –
OK, a library – and makes his plans to, literally, steal Margaret’s heart.
After engineering a chance meeting in the park, Haddo then
turns up at a visiting circus as the young couple along with Susie and her
quirky pal (played by Michael Powell) watch a snake charmer. Haddo, has some words
with the charmer, before picking up the snake and holding it to bite his hand,
within seconds he makes the bite disappear, but the snake then bites and apparently
almost kills the charmer’s assistant. He’s either a genuine magician or a
master of prestidigitation.
If you wish to see strange things, I have the power to
show them to you…
Haddo then makes a visit to the young woman’s apartment
and proceeds to hypnotise her, using the completed head of her sculpture to
present her with a vision of a pre-code Hell in which people seem to be doing
exactly the kinds of things that got them sent there in the first place. He
urges one especially lithely demonic, dancing faun (Hubert I. Stowitts, an American
dancer at the Folies Bergere), to make his moves on Margaret who succumbs in
ways that would dismay William Hays…
Hellzapoppin! |
Margaret and her good Doctor plan to marry but on the
morning of their ceremony, Arthur discovers that she has not only been whisked
away by Haddo but has married him. Convinced that her will is being controlled,
he begins to search Europe for them finally tracing them a year later to Monte
Carlo where Haddo is using Margaret to somehow fix the odds at the gaming table
presumably to fund his greater plan.
Arthur and his friend Dr. Porhoët (Firmin Gémier, a
leading light of French Theatre who created the role of Père Ubu in the
original production of Alfred Jarry's Ubu roi in 1896) set out to foil
the Professor and the closing segment is full of classic horror tropes right
down to a lightning illuminated tower and an “Igor” played by Henry Wilson. It’s
high camp and schlock horror but this is one of the places were that all began.
It’s a key work “Supervised by Rex Ingram” even if he didn’t direct all of it
according to Henry Lachman, who directed the Sabbat section, and Powell’s
memoirs.
The result is great fun and whilst Wegener is over the
top as usual, it’s all part of the fun – he does indeed heighten the melodrama.
Terry is a very effective damsel in distress and the Ingram’s supervision
brings out the best in all his players. Laurent Pigeolet’s score adds a lot of
flavour, inventive piano that works well with the creeping unreality of the
evil professor’s emotional invasion of the couple’s real world.
Iván Petrovich and Alice Terry
The restoration has the flaws of the material and lacks
the clarity you’d expect from a 35mm source with digital cleaning – we are so
spoilt these days – but it looks like what it is, a direct copy from 16mm. The 2010
Warner Archive DVD is still to be found on eBay and other places and whilst it’s
claimed as 88 minutes it’s 80 and as I say at the tope the same cut… probably!
Some copies of this Blu-ray are for sale on eBay, it’s not
cheap but it is different.