Film Review
Biographical dramas on notable historical figures had figured prominently
in cinema since its earliest years - George Méliès's profile
of
Alfred Dreyfus came out
in 1899, just four years after the invention of the cinematograph by the
Lumière brothers.
The industry was still in its infancy when filmmakers woke up to the commercial
gain from pandering to the cinema-going public's fascination with the lives
of kings and queens, folk heroes, celebrated artists and revered statesmen, the
men of genius who had shaped the world - never fearing to bend the truth
for the sake of a good story. It wasn't until the late 1950s that Hollywood
began to pay homage to its own leading lights. 1957 saw the release
of not one but two important cinema-related biopics. Honouring two
of silent cinema's greatest icons, Universal's
Man of a Thousand Faces
and Paramount's
The Buster Keaton Story provided a fully-fledged template
for subsequent fictionalised accounts of the lives of Tinsel Town's biggest
stars, setting a high standard of production excellence that was seldom matched
in the decades that followed.
In his heyday, Lon Chaney was an international superstar - as famous as Charlie
Chaplin, Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, but with one important difference:
he was a star without a face. What made him famous was the fact that
his visage altered completely from one film to the next. He was the
ultimate Human Chameleon, and the fact that the public never saw the man
behind the mask lent Chaney a somewhat sinister mystique that no other performer
enjoyed - then or since. Chaney avoided interviews like the plague
and resisted every attempt to have his unmade-up face photographed by the
press. 'Between pictures, there is no Lon Chaney', the publicity-shy
actor insisted. He did his utmost to cultivate his reputation as the
Man of Mystery, and in this he was so successful that he came close to airbrushing
himself out of history altogether - helped by the fact that he did not live
long enough to make the transition to sound cinema. By the 1950s, Lon
Chaney was all but forgotten, his work mostly unseen for over a generation
as the public had virtually no access to the now overlooked silent films
of the past.
Such was the scarcity of biographical information on Chaney that Robert Arthur,
the producer of
Man of a Thousand Faces, had to send out questionnaires
over a wide area on the off-chance that someone could offer some private
recollections of the man whose personal life had practically disappeared
without a trace. Needless to say, making sense of the mass of incomplete,
muddled and often wildly inconsistent responses that landed on his desk was
the greatest challenge that Arthur and his writing team had in making his
big screen tribute to one of the silent era's biggest names. It wasn't
until four decades later that meticulously researched biographies of Chaney
began to appear in bookshops (Michael Blake's
Lon Chaney: The Man Behind
the Thousand Faces being a definitive reference), so Robert Arthur's
biopic was for many years seen as the authoritative account of the actor's
life, although it is now known to be riddled with factual inaccuracies.
Man of a Thousand Faces gets the broad outline of its subject's life
correct but bends the truth quite drastically in quite a few places, for
the purpose of constructing a coherent story and fitting the melodramatic
conventions of the time. Most of film's inaccuracies relate to Chaney's
first wife Cleva, although she lived long enough to see the screenplay and
offer her approval (along with that of Chaney's son, Creighton). In
reality, it was Cleva, not her husband, who destroyed her own career, through
a depression-fuelled alcohol addiction. After her divorce, she never
met her son until her after husband's death - indeed, Creighton only found
out about his mother's existence after the reading of the will in which his
father left just one dollar out of his 500 thousand dollar estate to his loathed former wife. The scenes
in the second half of the film where Cleva visits Chaney and begs to see
her son are pure fiction, as is the melodramatic twist where Creighton abandons
his father to support his struggling mother.
The passing of the professional baton from Chaney Senior to Chaney Junior
did not take place in the nice cosy way the film imagines. At
no time did Lon Chaney encourage his son Creighton to follow his profession.
In fact, he did everything a responsible father could do to dissuade him
from taking up such a precarious trade, never spoiling him and doing all
he could to make his son into an independent, well-rounded adult. The
scene at the end of the film in which Chaney Senior hands his precious make-up
box over to his son, having appended the letters JR after his name in grease-paint,
is pure fabrication - as is the suggestion that he died at home surrounded
by his loving family. It was financial necessity and failure in his
other business ventures that drove Creighton Chaney to finally give in to
persistent entreaties from the movie men to start making films under the
name Lon Chaney Jr in the mid-1930s. Creighton cherished his father's
name but hated the Jr appendage and so dropped the latter as soon as had
established himself in the business by the early 1940s. It was as Lon
Chaney that Creighton Chaney is credited for his most celebrated roles, notably
that of
The Wolf Man.
It is not the minutiae of Lon Chaney Senior's complex life that matter in
Man of a Thousand Faces, but rather the overall impression it paints
of a formidable artist driven not by personal ambition but by an overwhelming
urge to rail against the societal prejudices and intolerances that so offended
him. The film opens with the ten-year-old Chaney outraged by his neighbours'
bigoted treatment of his deaf-mute parents and this howling sense of injustice
is what becomes the actor's defining quality, the stimulus for the numerous
warped outsiders that Chaney would play with such conviction and heartrending
pathos on screen for over a decade. It is the essence of the man, not
the trivial details of his messy life, that preoccupied the film's writing
team, and this they manage to get across admirably, helped in no small measure
by the lead actor James Cagney.
Now in his late fifties, Cagney was fast approaching the end of his own illustrious
career, with just a few films to go before he took early retirement in the
early 1960s (he did pop up one more time in 1981 in Milos Forman's
Ragtime).
Although he was - and still is - best known for his hard-boiled gangster
portrayals, in classics such as
The
Public Enemy (1931),
The
Roaring Twenties (1939) and
White
Heat (1949) - Cagney was also an extremely accomplished song-and-dance
man, as he had demonstrated just a few years previously in the hit musical
Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942).
In that film, the actor turned in what he considered to be his best performance
as the legendary entertainer George M. Cohan.
Like Cohan, Cagney had started out in vaudeville and had battled against
poverty and rejection for many years before he finally achieve fame and fortune.
Here, there was an obvious connection with Lon Chaney's early years, and
so Cagney was perhaps better suited to play the Man of a Thousand Faces than
any other actor on the planet. The similarities between the two men
- in both their personal and professional lives - are striking and the ease
with which Cagney appears to inhabit Chaney's skin and illuminate his inner
soul is assuredly the film's most appealing aspect. Just as Chaney
spent his entire screen career exposing the pain and torment within the hearts
of those that society shunned and reviled, so Cagney does his utmost to show
us the real Lon Chaney, the man beneath the make-up and skilfully borrowed
personas.
Through a performance that counts as one of his finest (sadly one that failed
to attract an Oscar nomination), James Cagney completely dispenses with his
familiar odious gangster mannerisms and instead adopts the guise of a more
down-to-earth regular Joe, with the failings and foibles that afflict us
all. One of the film's strengths is that it doesn't set out to lionise
its subject. Instead, it portrays Chaney throughout as an ordinary
man struggling through life by making the most of his extraordinary talent,
showing both the good and bad sides of his nature. The break-up of Chaney's
first marriage has a particularly bitter edge to it, and a subsequent encounter
between Lon and his rejected wife Cleva on the set of
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
shows the actor at his most awful, his monstrosity grotesquely emphasised
by his appearance in the guise of the hideously deformed Quasimodo.
Chaney appears at his most humane in his scenes with his elderly deaf-mute
mother (expertly played by Celia Lovsky, former wife of Peter Lorre, known
to
Star Trek fans as the original Vulcan sage T'Pau) and adorable
pre-teen son Creighton. For an actor who is best known for dishing
out rough treatment and snarling venom-tipped abuse at all and sundry, Cagney
is unbelievably gentle and good-natured in these affectionate vignettes,
imbuing them with a raw poignancy and intimacy that is rarely found in his
extensive filmography. It is in the film's masterfully staged set-pieces,
however, that Cagney is most in his element - particularly the outlandish
clown show-stopper which shamelessly steals the famous shadow dance from
the Astaire-Roger's musical
Swing Time.
This is James Cagney The Entertainer at his finest, a brilliantly conceived
set up for the film's first and most dramatic dive into unadorned horror
- Cleva's public attempt at suicide.
With the first half of the film devoted almost entirely to Lon Chaney's interminable
domestic strife, it comes as a welcome relief when the location shifts to
Hollywood and we are finally granted what we had hoped to see - some insights
into Chaney's legendary screen career. With the exterior set of Quasimodo's
Medieval Paris still standing on Universal's back-lot, the recreation of
the famous torture scene of
The Hunchback of Notre Dame was readily
achieved and Cagney does a good job imitating Chaney's harrowingly authentic
turn as a whip-lashed victim of mob brutality.
The gruesome unmasking scene from
The Phantom of the Opera
is also deftly reproduced, although Cagney's make-up differs markedly from
that created by Chaney in the original film, the latter having a far more
genuinely frightening effect. In the recreations, Cagney's face is
covered with a complete latex mask, rendering it flat and inexpressive -
in stark contrast to the monstrously realistic effect achieved by Chaney
with his minimal use of applied face make-up. The film's most stirring
reference to Chaney's career is the scene in which Cagney brilliantly recreates
the bogus metamorphosis of a supposed cripple from
The Miracle Worker
(1919) (the only sequence that still exists from this lost classic).
Lon Chaney's unique ability to contort his entire body through almost super-human
muscular control is adeptly reproduced by Cagney, in a sequence that feels
as blisteringly iconic as the original.
The fact that
Man of a Thousand Faces is so heavily slanted towards
its central protagonist inevitably means that the other people in Chaney's
life get little more than the most superficial of renderings. This
is most apparent in the two female leads - Dorothy Malone and Jane Greer
- who, as Mrs Chaney 1 and 2, both come across as pretty flat archetypes,
in the interests of narrative simplicity. Malone's Cleva has no chance
to show a sympathetic side as, right from the outset, she is portrayed as
a mean, self-interested bigot who loathes deformity and can't be bothered
to take the duties of parenthood seriously (in other words, the exact polar
opposite of her husband). Greer's far more likable Hazel is just as
thinly drawn, the familiar self-sacrificing heroine without which no Hollywood
melodrama of this era would be complete. Both actresses do what they
can with their badly underwritten, horribly stereotypical roles, but neither
succeeds in making their characters much more than stock melodrama types
- just part of the decor.
As the adult Creighton Chaney, Roger Smith scarcely registers as anything
more than the average well-brought up kid, with scarcely a trace of
the real Lon Chaney Jr's charm, charisma and tangled personal neuroses.
In the supporting cast, only Jim Backus (the
voice of Mr Magoo) makes much of an impression as Chaney's loyal friend and
press-agent Clarence, and the least said about Robert Evans's unbelievably
wooden turn as the great Irving Thalberg the better (the non-professional
actor was only given the part at the instance of Thalberg's widow, Norma
Shearer). Evans went on to become head of Paramount Pictures and thereafter
a highly respected independent film producer, his credits including
Rosemary's Baby (1968),
The Godfather (1972) and
Chinatown (1974).
Man of a Thousand Faces is a stand-out example of the Hollywood-themed
biopic but it does suffer from its pretty slavish adherence to the melodramatic
conventions of the time, with its screenwriters and musical composer Frank
Skinner tending to over-do the sentimentality in a few places. James
Cagney's faultless lead performance has a sustained reality that overrides
the film's casual mawkishness, helped by the lush widescreen black and white photography which
achieves the look of a prestige production.
The film is one of the career highlights of actor-turned director Joseph
Pevney, who had previously distinguished himself on the Joan Crawford vehicle
Female on the Beach (1955), having worked successfully with Charles
Laughton on
The Strange Door (1951) and Alan Ladd on
Desert Legion
(1953). From the mid-1960s onwards Pevney moved away from the cinema
and devoted himself to working on television. He is best remembered
today as one of the principal directors on the original Star Trek TV series
in the 1960s, for which he helmed some of the most highly regarded episodes
- including
The Devil in the Dark,
Amok Time,
The City on
the Edge of Forever and
The Trouble with Tribbles. Pevney's
television screen credits are impressive and include directorial work on
some of the most popular shows of the '60s, '70s and '80s, including
The
Alfred Hitchcock Hour,
The High Chaparral,
Bonanza,
Marcus
Welby, M.D. and
Trapper John, M.D.
Man of a Thousand Faces is by no means a masterpiece but it delivers
what it set out to achieve - to pay a respectful and fitting homage to one
of the most iconic stars of the silver screen. Unlike too many subsequent
biopics of celebrated entertainers, it goes beyond the myth and provides
a plausible flesh-and-blood portrait of the human being behind the legend,
whilst celebrating his genius. For a man like Lon Chaney, who became
a Fantômas-like man of mystery in his own life time, always staying
well away from the public gaze, it is quite an achievement for a film to
get so close to him and give him such a solid corporeal identity. This
comes partly from James Cagney's committed portrayal of the great man, animating
and settling the shape-shifter spectre with his own lifeblood and experience
so that Chaney becomes more than just an indefinable mythic entity.
But it also comes from the film's adept weaving of fact and fiction into
an engaging story of one man's personal crusade - not to make himself rich
and famous, but to make the world a more human and tolerant place, by forcing
us to see the anguish and suffering of those that society chooses to reject.
© James Travers 2023
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1930, Lon Chaney's untimely death at the age of 47 shocked
the world and led those who knew him to offer heartfelt tributes to this,
one of the undisputed giants of silent cinema. A quarter of a century
before, Chaney was an unknown vaudevillian, eking out a modest existence
as a stage performer with his young and beautiful wife Cleva. With
a child on the way, Cleva is forced to give up work, and so Lon is grateful
of the opportunity to work for the celebrated comedy duo Kolb and Dill on
their next show in San Francisco. The couple's already strained relationship
deteriorates further during a Yuletide visit to Lon's elderly parents, where
Cleva is horrified to discover that her husband's father and mother are both
deaf and dumb. Fearing that her unborn child will be similarly afflicted,
Cleva looks forward to the birth with dread. Her fears prove unfounded,
however, and the newborn Creighton Chaney is a perfectly normal baby boy.
Over the years that follow, Cleva neglects her duties as a mother to concentrate
on her career as a singer. This creates further tension in the Chaney
household and Lon is driven to cancel his wife's professional engagements
when their child falls ill. Lon's discovery that Cleva has been having
an affair with her rich patron sends the marriage into terminal decline.
The last straw comes when Cleva learns that her husband has developed an
affection for a chorus girl in his theatre troupe, Hazel Hastings.
Lon is performing his popular musical clown act when his distressed wife
suddenly appears on stage and swallows acid in front of a shocked audience.
Although she survives the attempt on her life, Cleva will never be able to
sing again. Amid the resulting furore the Chaneys' divorce quickly
ensues, but Lon is devastated when his son is taken into custody by the state
as he is unable to provide a stable home for the infant.
In a determined bid to regain custody of his beloved Creighton, Lon Chaney
heads for Hollywood, hoping to find work in the up-and-coming motion picture
business. Initially employed as a lowly extra, Lon soon gains a reputation
as an adept character performer, thanks to his uncanny ability to totally
transform his appearance with make-up and control over his body. Lon
draws on his experience as a mime artist - acquired by the need to communicate
through sign language with his deaf-mute parents in childhood - and finds
he has a remarkable talent for expressing the inner torment of those that
society rejects. By the early 1920s, he is known throughout the world
as The Man of a Thousand Faces, famous for his startlingly vivid portrayals
of misfits and monsters - unloved, loathed and spurned outsiders of every
shape and hue.
Encouraged by Universal Studios' ambitious new boss Irving Thalberg, Lon
Chaney triumphs in lavish productions such as
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
and
The Phantom of the Opera, and he soon has everything he could
desire - custody of his son, financial security and a devoted second wife,
in the form of Hazel. The teenage Creighton has high hopes of following
in his father's footsteps, but Lon Chaney Senior does little to encourage
him, insisting that actors are like idiots - born, not made. Creighton's
relationship with his father suddenly breaks down when the pampered youngster
discovers that his mother is not dead (as his father insisted she was) and
has been prevented from having any contact with him. Lon's continuing
professional success comes as scant consolation when his son suddenly abandons
him to live with his mother. The arrival of sound cinema brings new
challenges which the actor - now at the height of his glory - is determined
to overcome. Alas, time is not on his side...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.