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IMDbPro

L'homme le plus laid du monde

Original title: The Way of the Strong
  • 1928
  • 1h 1m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
163
YOUR RATING
Mitchell Lewis in L'homme le plus laid du monde (1928)
Drama

Williams is a bootlegger who takes in the down-and-out Nora. Nora eventually finds herself in the middle of a gang war between Williams and his chief rival, Tiger Louie.Williams is a bootlegger who takes in the down-and-out Nora. Nora eventually finds herself in the middle of a gang war between Williams and his chief rival, Tiger Louie.Williams is a bootlegger who takes in the down-and-out Nora. Nora eventually finds herself in the middle of a gang war between Williams and his chief rival, Tiger Louie.

  • Director
    • Frank Capra
  • Writers
    • William M. Conselman
    • Peter Milne
  • Stars
    • Mitchell Lewis
    • Alice Day
    • Margaret Livingston
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    163
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Frank Capra
    • Writers
      • William M. Conselman
      • Peter Milne
    • Stars
      • Mitchell Lewis
      • Alice Day
      • Margaret Livingston
    • 3User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos7

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    Top cast9

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    Mitchell Lewis
    Mitchell Lewis
    • Handsome Williams
    Alice Day
    Alice Day
    • Nora
    Margaret Livingston
    Margaret Livingston
    • Marie
    Theodore von Eltz
    Theodore von Eltz
    • Dan
    • (as Theodor Von Eltz)
    William Bailey
    William Bailey
    • Tiger Louie
    • (as William Norton Bailey)
    Willie Fung
    Willie Fung
    • Chinese Cook
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Perry
    Jack Perry
    • One of Handsome's Henchmen
    • (uncredited)
    Blackie Whiteford
    Blackie Whiteford
    • One of Handsome's Henchmen
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Wilber
    • One of Handsome's Henchmen
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Frank Capra
    • Writers
      • William M. Conselman
      • Peter Milne
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews3

    6.5163
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    Featured reviews

    8F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Neglected Frank Capra classic

    'The Way of the Strong' is an excellent crime drama from the late silent era, proving that Frank Capra had a firm grasp of the grammar of film techniques before he made his first talkie. The subject matter is also unusual for Capra: this film deals with themes that are more typical for Raoul Walsh or Howard Hawks.

    One of my least favourite movie plots is the old 'good crook/bad crook' chestnut. This is the one in which the 'hero' is a crook, but we're supposed to like him because he's charming and good-looking and a snappy dresser ... and because somebody else in the same movie is an even bigger crook but without the good looks and the charm. We're expected to empathise with the 'good' crook while he takes over the criminal empire of the (uglier, coarser and sloppier) rival crook ... and, conveniently, the 'good' crook is never shown robbing or cheating anyone except other criminals. ('The Sting' is a textbook example of this hoary old plot.) This plot line was already a cliché in 1928, when Tod Browning directed Lon Chaney in 'The Big City'.

    Refreshingly, 'The Way of the Strong' stands the cliché on its head. In Capra's film, both of the rival gangsters are established as unsympathetic at the beginning of the film, and the 'good' crook must gradually earn our sympathy through his actions, rather than charming us with a flashy wardrobe or some snappy dialogue. Even more refreshingly, for once the 'good' crook is extremely ugly. Outside of 'The Hunchback of Notre Dame' or 'The Elephant Man', I can't recall any other film besides 'The Way of the Strong' in which a character so grotesque-looking is still meant to engage our sympathy. (I'm excluding films such as 'The Phantom of the Opera', in which the deformed character hides his features behind a mask.)

    Mitchell Lewis gives an astonishing performance as a bootlegger with the ironic nickname 'Handsome' Williams ... ironic because he is a spectacularly ugly man. The close-ups in this movie indicate that actor Lewis is displaying his own extremely lumpy face on screen, with little or no prosthetic make-up. Based on this film, Lewis was an extremely talented actor, yet I've never seen him in a leading role in any other film; I'm forced to conclude that his grotesque features compromised his career. He looks slightly acromegalic, although not so extreme as Rondo Hatton or William F. Sauls (an acromegalic bit actor whom Capra used in several films over the course of three decades, and who also played a gangster in 'Some Like it Hot').

    'Handsome' Williams meets Nora, a young woman who is down-and-out but attractive. (A good performance from Alice Day, whose voice was unsuitable for talkies.) It's clear that Williams is attracted to Nora for sexual reasons, but we gradually see that he also feels genuine concern for her welfare. He gives her money and allows her to live in his mansion, which is also the headquarters for his bootlegging empire. We sense that Williams would like to have sex with Nora but fears rejection due to his spectacular ugliness.

    Williams's enemy is rival bootlegger Tiger Louie, played by William Norton Bailey. Each bootlegger commands a gang of thugs. Eventually the rivalry between the two gangs erupts into all-out gang war, with Nora caught in the middle. SPOILER COMING. It would be nice to report that Williams is reformed by the love of a good woman, and that Nora overcomes her disgust for Williams's ugliness, and she learns to return his love. Sad to say, these things don't happen. Williams wins the gang war, but he knows that Nora could never love him. He ends up drowning. The final shot in this movie is remarkably similar to the final shot in 'Phantom of the Opera'.

    I saw this movie at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and I was distressed when other people at the screening laughed during the gang-war sequence, in which Williams and his henchmen defend his mansion with elaborate machine-guns on the staircases. I didn't see anything ludicrous about this. During Prohibition, bootlegging was an extremely lucrative enterprise, and criminals defended themselves (against government agents and rival crooks) with substantial firepower. Nowadays, drugs dealers use the most lethal weapons available: bootleggers did the same thing in the 1920s.

    I'll rate 'The Way of the Strong' 8 points out of 10. The script is excellent; why did these screenwriters spend their entire careers in obscurity?
    7davidmvining

    Capra's best silent film

    The one extant Capra film I could not find a copy of in my run, and the major reason I was excited about this 4K/Blu-ray box set of Capra's work at Columbia (well, most of it). And it ends up being one of my favorite Capra silents. Like much of Capra's work at the time, there's a certain throwaway feel to the film, like Capra never expected the film to have a life beyond a few weeks, at most, in a movie theater. It's a quick 60-minute adventure through a love triangle and mobsters that has action, romance, and tragedy. It works quite well, to be honest.

    Handsome Williams (Mitchell Lewis) is a mobster with an ugly mug he can't stand to see in mirrors who has been making a fool of his fellow mobster, Tiger Louie (William Norton Bailey), by gunning down his bootleggers and stealing their alcohol to sell in his own place. Louie needs to get Handsome to stop, but Handsome has no weaknesses. That is, he has no evident weaknesses until Louie's girl, Marie (Margaret Livingston), follows Handsome and discovers his infatuation with a blind street violinist, Nora (Alice Day). Handsome takes her in after a drive by shooting meant for him, feeds her, and offers her a job to play in his joint alongside the down and out pianist Dan (Theodore von Eltz).

    The film really gets split in two from here. The first half is Handsome treating Nora well while hiding the fact that he's hideous from the blind girl. She wants to touch his face, but he refuses until he gets the idea that she should touch Dan's face instead. I mean, it's predictable, but Capra always handled these kinds of human interactions really well, even in his silent period. Both men fall for her, and Dan can't cross the man who's been giving him a job despite his obvious alcoholism. The second half is Louie getting back at Handsome by kidnapping Nora to get Handsome to stop hijacking his trucks. Since Louie is nefarious, he takes it too far, and that leads to Handsome having a big fight and shootout to save Nora.

    Really, the story, like most of Capra's silent films and even many of his sound ones, is not complicated. The joys are in the characters, the minor players around them, and his sense of humanist humor underlying everything. Despite the writing only giving the central three characters some basic character traits to define them, Capra lets his actors find the characters and give them life. He lets the camera linger on reaction shots to show some level of depth of feeling that deepens the action to a certain degree. But then there are the side characters, like the Chinese cook (Willie Fung) at Louie's house who feels understandably disloyal to Louie when Handsome points a gun at him to let him into Louie's house. The cook then uses the chaos as an excuse to steal bottles of alcohol and get gleefully drunk in a closet.

    The film ends on a shockingly down note which really did surprise me. I actually rewound it to make sure I didn't misinterpret what had happened, and it ends up feeling tragic. The perpetually ugly man getting his first real reaction on his looks from his girl and completely losing any hope he has. It's not pretty, but Lewis is such a solid actor that he sells it well.

    So, what was essentially a lost film for me has been found, and I get to gaze over approvingly at it every once in a while on my shelf. Like much of Capra's output, it was good, solid and sort of disposable entertainment that showed that Capra had a good technical hand on a human story that could touch the heart, even in minor ways. It's a good little example of his output from the time, and I'm glad I finally found a copy.

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    Storyline

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      Featured in Frank Capra, il était une fois l'Amérique (2020)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 19, 1928 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • None
    • Also known as
      • The Way of the Strong
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 1 minute
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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