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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA bitter clown endeavors to rescue the young woman he loves from the lecherous baron who once betrayed him.A bitter clown endeavors to rescue the young woman he loves from the lecherous baron who once betrayed him.A bitter clown endeavors to rescue the young woman he loves from the lecherous baron who once betrayed him.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 4 victoires au total
Alice Belcher
- Kvinna i cirkuspubliken
- (non crédité)
Bartine Burkett
- Barback ryttare
- (non crédité)
Harvey Clark
- Briquet
- (non crédité)
Clyde Cook
- Clown (1)
- (non crédité)
Carrie Daumery
- Statist
- (non crédité)
George Davis
- Clown (2)
- (non crédité)
Paulette Duval
- Zinida
- (non crédité)
F.F. Guenste
- Servitör som kommer med champagne
- (non crédité)
Joseph Hazelton
- Professor i Audience of Academy
- (non crédité)
Brandon Hurst
- Clown (3)
- (non crédité)
George Marion
- Skrattande professor
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
I saw this film first on Public Television (the score that is still used, I believe, was developed when the film was restored in Chicago) and have always loved it in all it's raging perversity. It is beyond ironic that one of the major studios was launched on a film who's premise was that the public is a malevolent, cruel ass. We are never allowed to forget that as horrible as the villain is; the drooling, jeering, sadistic vermin in the circus crowd are worse.
The spookiness of the direction, I think, is what hooked me. All the leads are excellent and perfectly cast. This is the ultimate in melodrama, and it's drawn is such broad strokes that it's hard to imagine as a talkie.
The spookiness of the direction, I think, is what hooked me. All the leads are excellent and perfectly cast. This is the ultimate in melodrama, and it's drawn is such broad strokes that it's hard to imagine as a talkie.
A celebrated circus clown, HE Who Gets Slapped, plots the punishment of two evil aristocrats.
Lon Chaney, the Silent Screen's master chameleon, adds another portrait to his gallery of pathetic grotesques. This time he plays a scientist who becomes a clown after his former life is destroyed by his adulterous wife and a faithless friend. A young woman provides him with someone to secretly adore, until her wicked father threatens to ruin her happiness. Chaney's face is an absolute wonder to watch as it registers pain, anguish, distress and unrequited passion, underlining the modern reassessment of him as one of cinema's greatest actors. Uninhibited in his circus costume & makeup, he provides no doubt but that he, under different circumstances, could have become a marvelous big top clown.
This was the first release of the new film company merger Metro-Goldwyn, thus making Chaney their first star, and was an important rung up the ladder for the two performers playing the young lovers. Norma Shearer & John Gilbert would soon be major movie celebrities--here they give good account of themselves as the circus' daredevil & bareback riders, and as Chaney's truest friends (both unaware of his love for Miss Shearer). In a film full of circus excitement, the director has given the young couple a moment of unexpected beauty: whilst on a picnic their innocent affections are noticed by a passing peasant, who gives the call of the cuckoo as the perfect grace note to their bucolic joy.
Marc McDermott as a brutal Baron and Tully Marshall as a dissolute Count make villains well worthy of the harshest retribution. Comic Ford Sterling plays one of Chaney's fellow clowns.
The Studio gave this silent film fine production values, while director Victor Sjöström added little embellishments of cinematic flair, dealing with scenes of mysterious clown figures representing fate, which enhance the film.
Lon Chaney, the Silent Screen's master chameleon, adds another portrait to his gallery of pathetic grotesques. This time he plays a scientist who becomes a clown after his former life is destroyed by his adulterous wife and a faithless friend. A young woman provides him with someone to secretly adore, until her wicked father threatens to ruin her happiness. Chaney's face is an absolute wonder to watch as it registers pain, anguish, distress and unrequited passion, underlining the modern reassessment of him as one of cinema's greatest actors. Uninhibited in his circus costume & makeup, he provides no doubt but that he, under different circumstances, could have become a marvelous big top clown.
This was the first release of the new film company merger Metro-Goldwyn, thus making Chaney their first star, and was an important rung up the ladder for the two performers playing the young lovers. Norma Shearer & John Gilbert would soon be major movie celebrities--here they give good account of themselves as the circus' daredevil & bareback riders, and as Chaney's truest friends (both unaware of his love for Miss Shearer). In a film full of circus excitement, the director has given the young couple a moment of unexpected beauty: whilst on a picnic their innocent affections are noticed by a passing peasant, who gives the call of the cuckoo as the perfect grace note to their bucolic joy.
Marc McDermott as a brutal Baron and Tully Marshall as a dissolute Count make villains well worthy of the harshest retribution. Comic Ford Sterling plays one of Chaney's fellow clowns.
The Studio gave this silent film fine production values, while director Victor Sjöström added little embellishments of cinematic flair, dealing with scenes of mysterious clown figures representing fate, which enhance the film.
We really are lucky he spent so much time at MGM since the survival rate of their silents is better than any of the other studios. This is one of the few silent films that my husband enjoys, and I think all of the credit goes to Lon Chaney. He demonstrates such genuine emotion. I really believe that if the Academy Awards had started a few years before they did, Chaney would have won at least one Best Actor award.
Scientist Paul Beaumont (Lon Chaney) makes a great discovery - in what field it is never said - only to have his benefactor, The Baron Regnard, steal his findings and his wife. In what is supposed to be his big day before the academy - of what field it is never said - Regnard claims the findings are his own. When Beaumont claims the ideas are stolen, Regnard slaps Beaumont and the whole academy laughs at him.
Having lost his work and his wife, Beaumont becomes a clown in a circus. A clown that gets laughs by getting slapped, and takes the name "He" as in "He Who Gets Slapped". Now personally, I don't see what is so funny about a clown being slapped, and how do you get such a job with no resume anyways? But I digress.
"He" has an unrequited love for a bareback rider (Norma Shearer as Consuelo), who is from a formerly wealthy family that has lost all of its money. This is OK by Consuelo, but her dad wants to marry her off to the evil Baron, who really wants the girl as a mistress since he prefers disposable people, but her father convinces the Baron that marriage is the only way he can have her, and - by the way - there will be a not so small fee/loan involved for Consuelo's dad in exchange for the girl.
Now "He" is in a good position. The Baron has been hanging around the circus because of Consuelo, and "He" recognizes the Baron and knows that he can only bring unhappiness to Consuelo, but the Baron has no idea "He" is Beaumont, with all of that clown makeup.
How does this all work out? I'll just say there is not your typical MGM sappy happy ending like you get starting in the late 20s, and Leo The Lion finally gets his big break in the movies.
Why is this film taking place in France yet half the people have Italian names? I really have no idea, but I love the change between scenes with the laughing clown spinning the globe. In 1924 films did not yet have soundtracks, yet there was a score composed for this film by William Axt. Did MGM just distribute this score to theatres for the orchestras to play?
This film has a very experimental feel about it, Chaney is always worth watching, and it is interesting to see Norma Shearer and John Gilbert so early in their careers. Highly recommended.
Scientist Paul Beaumont (Lon Chaney) makes a great discovery - in what field it is never said - only to have his benefactor, The Baron Regnard, steal his findings and his wife. In what is supposed to be his big day before the academy - of what field it is never said - Regnard claims the findings are his own. When Beaumont claims the ideas are stolen, Regnard slaps Beaumont and the whole academy laughs at him.
Having lost his work and his wife, Beaumont becomes a clown in a circus. A clown that gets laughs by getting slapped, and takes the name "He" as in "He Who Gets Slapped". Now personally, I don't see what is so funny about a clown being slapped, and how do you get such a job with no resume anyways? But I digress.
"He" has an unrequited love for a bareback rider (Norma Shearer as Consuelo), who is from a formerly wealthy family that has lost all of its money. This is OK by Consuelo, but her dad wants to marry her off to the evil Baron, who really wants the girl as a mistress since he prefers disposable people, but her father convinces the Baron that marriage is the only way he can have her, and - by the way - there will be a not so small fee/loan involved for Consuelo's dad in exchange for the girl.
Now "He" is in a good position. The Baron has been hanging around the circus because of Consuelo, and "He" recognizes the Baron and knows that he can only bring unhappiness to Consuelo, but the Baron has no idea "He" is Beaumont, with all of that clown makeup.
How does this all work out? I'll just say there is not your typical MGM sappy happy ending like you get starting in the late 20s, and Leo The Lion finally gets his big break in the movies.
Why is this film taking place in France yet half the people have Italian names? I really have no idea, but I love the change between scenes with the laughing clown spinning the globe. In 1924 films did not yet have soundtracks, yet there was a score composed for this film by William Axt. Did MGM just distribute this score to theatres for the orchestras to play?
This film has a very experimental feel about it, Chaney is always worth watching, and it is interesting to see Norma Shearer and John Gilbert so early in their careers. Highly recommended.
After my mixed response to THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME (1923), I decided to augment my current Silent-film schedule with a mini-Lon Chaney marathon. Others I intend to watch in the coming days are THE MONSTER (1925), THE BLACK BIRD (1926), MR. WU (1927) and WHERE EAST IS EAST (1929). All of these I have recorded off Cable TV, and so far all have received a single viewing.
So, let's start with HE WHO GETS SLAPPED and THE UNKNOWN which, incidentally, have many things in common. They are both set in a circus and involve love triangles which end in tragedy. However, the style adopted by the two films' directors, Victor Sjostrom and Tod Browning respectively, is completely different and this goes for the characters Chaney plays, too.
I had been instantly impressed by HE WHO GETS SLAPPED, and a second viewing only consolidates my high opinion of it. The film - MGM's very first production, incidentally was considered highbrow material at the time, not only because it was helmed by a foreigner but also due to the unusually intricate nature of the plot (complete with a healthy dose of symbolism) and a clear emphasis on composition and lighting throughout (one amazing shot has Chaney alone in the circus arena when the lights are being turned off for the night, with the screen entirely black except for Chaney's painted face!).
Chaney is superb as the humiliated scientist-turned-clown (drawing an interesting parallel to Emil Jannings in two Expressionist masterworks, Murnau's THE LAST LAUGH [1924] and Von Sternberg's THE BLUE ANGEL [1930]). His whole life's work is stolen from him and he decides to go into self-willed exile (an influence perhaps on Chaney's future characterization as Erik, the 'Phantom' of the Paris Opera House?) at a circus. Chaney's reaction shots in this film are nothing short of sensational. The sheer masochism in evidence here (a distinctly un-American touch) must not have gone down well with the studio, to say nothing of the gruesome ending when he finally wreaks his revenge. I cannot say for sure, but most of what Chaney was to accomplish in his famed collaboration with Tod Browning, on films like THE UNHOLY THREE (1925) and THE UNKNOWN, is already evident in this film - except that the actor here is less given to uncanny make-up design (which might have overshadowed his acting abilities at times), while the handling is altogether more sophisticated and artful!
Only the middle section drags a bit, as it stresses the budding relationship between Norma Shearer and John Gilbert (though this is contrasted with her father's scheming with a lecherous Baron who, incidentally, turns out to be Chaney's deadly enemy!), but the rest is riveting stuff this film deserves to be better known, and I long for the day Warners gets to release a Box Set of Lon Chaney classics on DVD!!
So, let's start with HE WHO GETS SLAPPED and THE UNKNOWN which, incidentally, have many things in common. They are both set in a circus and involve love triangles which end in tragedy. However, the style adopted by the two films' directors, Victor Sjostrom and Tod Browning respectively, is completely different and this goes for the characters Chaney plays, too.
I had been instantly impressed by HE WHO GETS SLAPPED, and a second viewing only consolidates my high opinion of it. The film - MGM's very first production, incidentally was considered highbrow material at the time, not only because it was helmed by a foreigner but also due to the unusually intricate nature of the plot (complete with a healthy dose of symbolism) and a clear emphasis on composition and lighting throughout (one amazing shot has Chaney alone in the circus arena when the lights are being turned off for the night, with the screen entirely black except for Chaney's painted face!).
Chaney is superb as the humiliated scientist-turned-clown (drawing an interesting parallel to Emil Jannings in two Expressionist masterworks, Murnau's THE LAST LAUGH [1924] and Von Sternberg's THE BLUE ANGEL [1930]). His whole life's work is stolen from him and he decides to go into self-willed exile (an influence perhaps on Chaney's future characterization as Erik, the 'Phantom' of the Paris Opera House?) at a circus. Chaney's reaction shots in this film are nothing short of sensational. The sheer masochism in evidence here (a distinctly un-American touch) must not have gone down well with the studio, to say nothing of the gruesome ending when he finally wreaks his revenge. I cannot say for sure, but most of what Chaney was to accomplish in his famed collaboration with Tod Browning, on films like THE UNHOLY THREE (1925) and THE UNKNOWN, is already evident in this film - except that the actor here is less given to uncanny make-up design (which might have overshadowed his acting abilities at times), while the handling is altogether more sophisticated and artful!
Only the middle section drags a bit, as it stresses the budding relationship between Norma Shearer and John Gilbert (though this is contrasted with her father's scheming with a lecherous Baron who, incidentally, turns out to be Chaney's deadly enemy!), but the rest is riveting stuff this film deserves to be better known, and I long for the day Warners gets to release a Box Set of Lon Chaney classics on DVD!!
Before I saw "He Who Get's Slapped" my 3 favorite movies were The Empire Strikes Back, Evil Dead 2, and Star Trek II.
This movie is 180 degrees from any of those movies, in fact, it's in a whole other universe. This silent film that opened in 1924 changed my movie tastes so much that it's amazing. I was just flicken channels one night after studying for a final for 3 hours and stopped on TCM for a second because Robert Osborne said that it starred Lon Chaney. In my niavete, I thought he was talking about the guy who played The Wolf Man, but this is in fact Lon Chaney Sr. Junior is the guy who had played Wolfie.
So I started watching it and was about to change it when I found out it was a silent film. But I stayed with it for a few minutes, and soon I was enraptured. 2 hours later, I was riveted to the edge of my seat as HE's struggle came to a climax. Well, the next day, I failed the test. But I learned more watching that movie than I could ever learn in Calc 320.
Since then, I have watched TCM religiously (when I'm not studying of course) and now I realize that 99% of movies made in modern times are vastly inferior to the old classic movies.
Black and White RULES
If you haven't seen He Who Gets Slapped. Track it down and WATCH IT. It is WAY better than The Phantom Menace.
This movie is 180 degrees from any of those movies, in fact, it's in a whole other universe. This silent film that opened in 1924 changed my movie tastes so much that it's amazing. I was just flicken channels one night after studying for a final for 3 hours and stopped on TCM for a second because Robert Osborne said that it starred Lon Chaney. In my niavete, I thought he was talking about the guy who played The Wolf Man, but this is in fact Lon Chaney Sr. Junior is the guy who had played Wolfie.
So I started watching it and was about to change it when I found out it was a silent film. But I stayed with it for a few minutes, and soon I was enraptured. 2 hours later, I was riveted to the edge of my seat as HE's struggle came to a climax. Well, the next day, I failed the test. But I learned more watching that movie than I could ever learn in Calc 320.
Since then, I have watched TCM religiously (when I'm not studying of course) and now I realize that 99% of movies made in modern times are vastly inferior to the old classic movies.
Black and White RULES
If you haven't seen He Who Gets Slapped. Track it down and WATCH IT. It is WAY better than The Phantom Menace.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe first film to feature Leo the Lion roaring as MGM's logo. Designed by Howard Dietz, the logo was first used for the Goldwyn Pictures Corporation film Polly of the Circus (1917) and passed to MGM when Goldwyn merged with two other companies to form MGM. Fittingly, a real lion plays a key plot point in the film's story.
- GaffesDuring part of the scene where the lion is loose in the room, Beaumont is seen with no, or hardly any, black makeup around his right eye. Before and after this scene, both eyes are made up.
- Citations
Title Card: A strange thing, the heart of a man - that loves, suffers, and despairs - yet has courage to hope, believe - and love - again.
- Crédits fousIn the version aired on Turner Classic Movies (TCM) on April 29, 2020, just after the Leo (the MGM Lion) shot and prior to the credits intertitle, there was an approval stamp within a toroidal circle: Approved by Kansas State Board of Review Serial Number C8806; below that was a rectangular text box: KANSAS GROWS THE BEST WHEAT IN THE WORLD
- Versions alternativesThis silent film was originally shot at 18 fps, which gives a proper running time of 95 minutes. Most copies that circulate today, including the Warner Bros. "Archive" DVD release and the TCM television version, as well as "public domain" versions like the copy on archive.org, incorrectly play at 24 fps with an added music soundtrack, rattling in at a speedup of 71 minutes.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Twenty Years After (1944)
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- How long is He Who Gets Slapped?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 172 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 35 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was Larmes de clown (1924) officially released in India in English?
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