In light of today's freakfest in DC and this past week's circus side show of freaks undulating in front of the formidable General Petraeus, I thought the cult classic FREAKS was positively fitting. Filmed in 1932, Directed by Tod Browning Also Known as, "Forbidden Love", "The Monster Show", "Nature's Mistakes."
Freaks is a Pre-Code 1932 horror film about sideshow performers, directed by Tod Browning.
The movie was made by Al Boasberg, Willis Goldbeck, Leon Gordon, and Edgar Allan Woolf from the short story Spurs by Tod Robbins. Browning, famed at the time for his collaborations with Lon Chaney and for directing Bela Lugosi in Dracula (1931), took the exceptional step of casting real people with deformities as the eponymous sideshow "freaks," rather than using costumes and makeup. Director Browning had been a member of a traveling circus in his early years, and much of the film was drawn from his personal experiences. He intended to portray the classic moral of how outer beauty does not necessarily equate to inner beauty. In the film, the physically deformed "freaks" are inherently trusting and honorable people, while the real monsters are two of the "normal" members of the circus who conspire to murder one of the performers to obtain his large inheritance.
Reaction to this film was so intense that Browning had trouble finding work afterwards, and this in effect brought his career to an early close. Because its deformed cast was shocking to moviegoers of the time, the film was banned in the United Kingdom for thirty years.
In 1994 the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". More here.




That movie gave me horrible nightmares when I was a kid. I get the same kind of nightmares today when I think about nancy pelosi or hillary clinton
Posted by: Yidwithlid | Saturday, September 15, 2007 at 11:54 PM
pamela:
i will not forget the little man with the big knife in quite a while.
at that moment, the world turned. that must have been profoundly unsettling for audiences of the time, very disquieting, in a not totally comprehended way. the little people with the bright eyes, in the shadows and rain.
this is, precisely, by the way, the effect of terrorism.
"little shop of horrors," and now this movie. i do not know where you find them, but i appreciate you bringing them to us.
john jay
Posted by: john jay | Sunday, September 16, 2007 at 04:06 PM
I loved this movie. At the end where the woman is turned into a duckgirl, it gives us all hope that G-d will repay people like Hillary and Nancy in the end...
Posted by: Timur | Sunday, September 16, 2007 at 04:59 PM