Film Review
The last years of the tragic life of Joseph Carey Merrick are
beautifully recounted in this intensely moving drama, which is based on
the personal recollections of his friend and benefactor Frederick
Treves. Much of Treves' account of Merrick's life has been shown
to be factually inaccurate (for some unknown reason Treves refers to
him as John, not Joseph), but the film adheres to his version of events
and makes a few alterations for dramatic effect.
The Elephant Man is by no means an
entirely accurate account of Merrick's life (it makes no mention of the
man's unimaginably wretched life prior to his becoming a freak show
exhibit), but that is not its primary function. This is a film
which, as a mix of morality play and fable, compels us to reflect on
our personal prejudices and our inability to accept others who are
different from ourselves. Thirty years on from when it was first
seen, it remains depressingly relevant and still strikes a powerful
chord. A commercial and critical success, the film failed to win
any of the
eight Oscars it was nominated for (including Best Picture and Best
Actor), but it received three BAFTAs, for Best Film, Best Actor (John
Hurt) and Best Production Design.
David Lynch's first feature
Eraserhead
(1977) had made such a big impression on the prolific
actor-director-producer Mel Brooks that the latter was keen to produce
Lynch's second full-length film,
The
Elephant Man. On the face of it, you could hardly imagine
a more unlikely pair to produce and direct this film. Brooks was
closely associated with bawdy popular comedies such as
Blazing Saddles (1974); Lynch
would later become renowned for his wild excursions into fantasy and
surrealism, with films such as
Dune (1984) and
Blue Velvet (1986).
Whilst
The Elephant Man is
probably the most conventional of Lynch's films, it is every bit as
artistically inspired as the director's subsequent films, but it also
has far more of an emotional core. This is a film that is itself
a kind of freak show, showing us the worst and best that humanity has
to offer. Beautifully written and acted, it can hardly fail to
bring a tear to the eye of anyone who watches it.
The central role of John Merrick, a.k.a. The Elephant Man, presented
the challenge of a career for actor John Hurt. Buried under
several layers of foam rubber (which not only concealed his face but
made speaking his lines an ordeal), Hurt somehow manages to invest
his tragically deformed character with an astonishing depth and
humanity. We may be shocked when we first catch a glimpse of
Merrick's monstrous face but it is not long before we are enchanted by
the angelic soul that lies within. Abused by both man and nature,
Merrick had every reason to be a bitter, twisted wretch, but in fact he
is the complete opposite. His outer deformities are completely at
odds with his inner purity, whilst those who surround him - the freak
show manager who tyrannises him, the hospital porter who humiliates him
and the seemingly kind surgeon who uses him for professional
advantage - show their monstrous nature not in their faces, but
in their inhuman behaviour. Hurt's extraordinary performance
avoids pathos and is heart-wrenching in its sincerity, making us aware
that it is not his outer appearance that makes a man a monster, but his
character.
Hurt's standout performance is by far the best thing about
The Elephant Man, but there are
many other commendable aspects about the film. Hurt's own
contribution is perfectly complemented by Anthony Hopkins' sympathetic
portrayal of Merrick's benefactor, Frederick Treves. Hopkins'
character is far from being a straightforward good guy but is highly
conflicted, unsure of his own motives in helping Merrick and even
questioning whether he is any better than the principal baddy, the
grotesque freak show manager superbly played by Freddie Jones.
The distinguished supporting cast includes Anne Bancroft (Mel Brooks'
wife and frequent collaborator), John Gielgud, Wendy Hiller, Hannah
Gordon and Michael Elphick, all at their best. No less impressive
is Freddie Francis' atmospheric widescreen black-and-white photography,
which not only evokes the murk and grime of Dickens' England, a land
disfigured by social inequality and rampant industrial progress, but
also underscores the dark poetry and poignancy of Merrick's struggle to
find recognition in a society which places too great a value on
physical appearance.
The
Elephant Man is a film that tells us a great deal about
ourselves, revealing a monster far more hideous than its deformed
central character: our crass tendency to judge others not by what they
do, but by what they look like.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
In Victorian England, Frederick Treves, a senior surgeon at the London
Hospital, comes across a heavily deformed man being exhibited as a
freak in the East End of London. The man is called John Merrick
and appears to be an imbecile. His owner, a disreputable brute
named Bytes, has christened him the Elephant Man, on account of his
pachyderm-like skin. So extreme are Merrick's deformities that Treves
is impelled to offer Bytes money so that he can examine him and present
him to his peers at the hospital. When Merrick falls ill with
bronchitis, Treves places him in a quarantine room at the hospital and
makes a startling discovery. Far from being an idiot, Merrick
shows that he has a sensitive nature and can think for himself.
He can even speak, although his speech is impaired by his acute facial
abnormalities. Treves persuades the hospital's governor to allow
Merrick to stay in rooms at the hospital and the former fairground
exhibit is soon receiving regular visits from society figures who are
eager to make his acquaintance, including the Princess of Wales.
The hospital's porter also seeks to capitalise on Merrick's notoriety
and arranges late night viewings for the district's poorer folk who are
in search of a cheap thrill. On one such visit, Bytes shows up
and abducts his former freak, whisking him off to continental
Europe. Merrick is soon back to his old life, a fairground
attraction who is neglected and abused by his employer. With the
help of his fellow freaks, Merrick manages to escape and returns to
England, although by now his health has taken a turn for the
worse. Treves is delighted to be reunited with Merrick, whom he
now considers a friend, and, realising that the unfortunate man is
dying, resolves to make his last days as comfortable as possible.
Merrick's love of art makes a deep impression on the celebrated actress
Mrs Kendal, who invites him to watch her perform at a London
theatre. It proves to be the happiest evening of John Merrick's life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.