Freaks was first released 80 years ago. I think I’ve avoided
giving away the movie’s biggest surprise, but there are a few fairly
insignificant spoilers ahead.
Freaks is a movie
that has to be seen either more than once, or not at all. It generates a
kaleidoscope of reactions when seen for the first time, and it’s
impossible to sort them all out with a single viewing, which will
overwhelm you emotionally—but it takes repeated visits to this surreal
masterpiece to determine an intellectual response.
It’s
a movie that’s rich with anecdotes. One has Irving Thalberg, the film’s
uncredited producer, telling director Tod Browning that he wanted to
make the horror movie to end all horror movies, and then saying, when he
saw the finished product, “Well, I asked for it and I got it.”
One
story has it that F. Scott Fitzgerald, who was under contract as a
writer at MGM when the picture was made, bolted from the studio
commissary and threw-up when the unusual cast came in for lunch. Another
version has it that Fitzgerald felt more at ease with the cast of Freaks than he did with the studio big shots and so sat with them and lunched at their table.
Some
say that Tod Browning exploited the cast (only Olga Roderick, the
Bearded Lady, went on record later as saying she regretted her
participation in the production) while others claim that Browning, a
former circus and sideshow man himself, befriended the performers and
set them up for life by turning them into international celebrities.
One thing is certain: no other Hollywood film has ever generated legends like these.
As
the story opens, we are moving slowly through a sideshow. The indoor
talker, who bears a striking resemblance to Tod Browning, begins to tell
his audience the back story of the show’s most unusual attraction. He
and his audience gather around the top of a walled pit from the interior
of which a light is shining up. Then we slip into the past …
A well-tailored dwarf named Hans (Harry Earles, who had worked with Browning in the silent version of The Unholy Three)
is engaged to Frieda, another dwarf (Daisy Earles, Harry’s sister in
real life). Despite his betrothal to Frieda, Hans is smitten by
Cleopatra, the circus’ star aerialist (Olga Baclanova). Cleopatra
encourages the little man’s attentions because he is willing to loan her
money and buy her presents.
Cleo’s casual cruelty is
the talk of the circus. Everyone knows that she is playing Hans for a
sucker except Hans, who continues to harbor the delusion that she likes
him.
Unknown to Hans, Cleo is actually romantically
involved with Hercules, the strong man (Henry Victor). We first see
Hercules as he wrestles a bull, the animal’s horns representing both the
phallus and the traditional crown of the cuckold.
Finally,
Frieda confronts Cleopatra and begs the big woman to leave Hans alone.
She lets slip that Hans has inherited a fortune and we can see on Cleo’s
face that she decides to change her amused encouragement of the little
man to a determined attempt to woo him. She soon maneuvers Hans into a
proposal, which she accepts with a plan to poison him and steal his
money.
The wedding feast provides the background for
the film’s most celebrated and quoted scene. Cleopatra, Hercules, the
freaks and the other circus normals who have befriended them are
gathered around a large table under the big top. Cleo and Hercules think
the event is one huge joke, knowing as they do what they intend for
Hans.
But then another dwarf stands on the table and brings a
loving cup to everyone gathered. They each take a sip while chanting the
words that make Cleopatra a member of their community—“Gooble gobble,
we accept her, one of us.” When the loving cup is thrust toward
Cleopatra she rises, the full horror of what they’re saying dawning on
her. “You. Dirty. Slimy. Freaks!” she screams, silencing the crowd.
Obviously,
the party is over and soon the only ones left at the table are
Hercules, Cleopatra and Hans. The drunken strong man lifts Hans from his
bench and puts him on Cleo’s shoulders telling the woman to give her
new husband a horsey ride back to his wagon. (The movie is adapted from a
short story called “Spurs” by Tod Robbins and this “horsey ride” is at
the center of the original tale.)
Hans soon falls ill,
but the freaks have overheard the plotting of Hercules and Cleopatra.
Off screen they tell Hans what his wife and her lover are up to and one
dark stormy night the freaks take their revenge.
The
film ends back at the indoor sideshow. A woman looks down into the pit
and screams. Then Browning shows us the nature of the freak’s revenge. I
won’t go into any detail, but is it absurd? Oh yeah. Effective? You
better believe it.
An overview of the plot, which is a
standard morality/revenge tale, does nothing to prepare you for viewing
the film. The cadre of freaks is made up of dwarfs, microcephalics
(referred to in the movie as “pinheads”), Siamese twins, people who are
armless and legless—and in one case, both—a bearded lady, an
hermaphrodite, and persons the descriptions of whom are beyond my
vocabulary.
The characters play their reaction to the
sideshow performers several ways. Some of the normals abuse them. Some
are casually cruel and some are deliberately so. Other normals befriend
the freaks. Wallace Ford and Leila Hyams are Phroso the clown (a name
used by Lon Chaney in Browning’s silent West of Zanzibar, also
with a circus background) and Venus, the bareback rider, who, while
sometimes a bit patronizing, are intended to represent acceptance.
More
problematic is Browning’s attitude as evidenced in the film. We first
see the freaks, described as “children” although several of them are
anything but, frolicking on a picnic. As they skip around in a circle
they look for all the world as if Browning wanted to parody the fairies
in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Of course, Max Reinhardt’s film of
that play wouldn’t be made for another three years, but the suggestion
of Arcadian fantasy turned into a sick joke is inescapable.
In
fact, any joke involving the freaks must come across as black humor.
One of the Siamese twins, Daisy Hilton, is married to a clown (Roscoe
Ates) and the second twin, Violet, becomes engaged. The two men ask each
other to bring their wives over for a visit.
But
sometimes the joke is used to suggest that there isn’t much difference
between one world and another. We first meet the half-man/half-woman
Joseph Josephine as s/he strolls between the wagons and Roscoe is
changing out of the costume of a Roman lady. The male/female combination
is emphasized.
And occasionally the humor is just as
bizarre as the visuals. When Phroso comforts Venus, who has just broken
up with her boyfriend, she tells him, “Say, you’re a pretty good kid.”
“You’re darn right,” he responds. “You should have caught me before my
operation.” Whatever that may mean.
There really isn’t
much of horror in this horror movie, although there is a lot of unease
beginning when the freaks figure out that Hercules and Cleopatra intend
to murder Hans. Everywhere the big woman turns, there are two or three
of her unusual enemies watching from the shadows.
Things
turn more grotesque during the climactic storm when the wagons carrying
Cleopatra and Hercules tip over in the mud. One of the little men
throws a knife at the strong man, dropping him and allowing several more
freaks to swarm over him. Cleopatra rushes off into the woods before
she is brought down. In one shot, an armless/legless man is seen
squirming through the mud in pursuit of the villains. He is carrying a
dagger in his mouth—but how does he intend to use it? It’s a pure
nightmare vision, all visceral intensity and no logic.
Originally,
Browning intended a tree to fall on Cleo, thereby giving the freaks the
opportunity they need to carve her up. Hercules was supposed to be seen
in the epilog singing like a counter-tenor, having been emasculated. As
the film now stands, Hercules is last seen being attacked. Only
Cleopatra survives to become truly, “one of us.”
But
perhaps as shocking and horrifying as the appearance of the freaks to
audiences of 1932 is the film’s sexual innuendo. Cleopatra is blatantly
sexual. When Hercules comes to her wagon, she offers to cook some eggs
for him. She turns to him, puts her hands on her hips, thrusts her
breasts toward him and asks, theoretically about the eggs, “How do you
like them?”
Pre-code audiences were used to stuff like
that, but they hadn’t been exposed, in mainstream films at least, to
the necessity of public sex when Siamese twins cohabitate with their
husbands. The idea of a dwarf and a “big woman” having a sexual
relationship can still generate some ribald snickering, but there’s
undeniably something off-putting in the mental image as well.
Part
of this problem springs from the tragic gut-feeling that the freaks are
somehow less than human, a delusion that the movie tries so hard to
correct. But the question is: can it? Can any film move audiences
completely beyond the unwanted and unwarranted notion that there is
something unnaturally wrong with people who look so different?
Browning’s
camera jumps in and out, and tracks with the movement of the characters
with a freedom he had rarely allowed himself previously. But during
those last moments, when the freaks wreak their vengeance, the camera
stands still, their faces lunging at us in close-up, and even the most
sensitive ones among us are likely to push backward in our seats to put
as much distance as possible between us and the grotesque image on the
screen
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