(Credit to Richard Smith)

By Lucas Hardwick, Contributing Writer, in collaboration with Atl Retro

Welcome to Apes on Film! This column exists to scratch your retro-film-in-high-
definition itch. We’ll be reviewing new releases of vintage cinema and television on disc
of all genres, finding gems and letting you know the skinny on what to avoid. Here at
Apes on Film, our aim is to uncover the best in retro film. As we dig for artifacts, we’ll do
our best not to bury our reputation. What will we find out here? Our destiny.

Credit to Eureka Entertainment

THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME – 1923

4 out of 5 Bananas

Starring: Lon Chaney, Patsy Ruth Miller, Norman Kerry, Branson Hurst, Ernest Torrence

Director: Wallace Worsley

Rated: Unrated

Studio: Eureka Entertainment

Region: 2K Blu-Ray: Region B – UK & Ireland

BRD Release Date: October 17, 2022

Audio Formats: English 2.0 DTS-HDMA. Silent with musical score

Video Codec: MPEG-4 AVC

Resolution: 1080p

Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1

Run Time: 100 minutes 

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Credit to Eureka Entertainment

Who doesnt love a good underdog story? And whats a good underdog story without a little bullying? In most cases, the misfit with the outlying idiosyncrasy is picked on by some equivalent of the captain of the football team, and by the end of the film, the narrative takes a turn, and the hardscrabble hero emerges victorious. You can see it coming a mile away, but the comeback story is always entertaining because we love to see losers” win. What does that say about us? Whether theyre a weirdo, an eccentric, a screwball, or a maverick, we somehow relate to the struggles of the odd person out. 

The thrill of the underdog narrative has been a staple of storytelling since the beginning of time — see also, the Gospels. Its hard to pin down when and where this brand of entertainment began at large, but itd be easy to assume Victor Hugos 1831 novel Notre Dame de Paris was one of the earliest. Better known as The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Hugos novel originally focused on an array of characters around the famous church, but over time became the more specific story of the deformed cathedral bellringer and his rise to tragic heroism.

Credit to Eureka Entertainment

Universal Pictures 1923 film wasnt the first motion picture adaptation of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, but it was the first time a film featured Quasimodo (Lon Chaney) as the main character. Despite actor Lon Chaneys passion and involvement in the making of the feature, the character of the Hunchback still seems to have to fight for top billing amongst a long list of cast members. At its heart, this version The Hunchback of Notre Dame remains the gypsy Esmeraldas story.

With more plot than you can shake a stick at, Universals The Hunchback of Notre Dame is the outrageous story of a gypsy woman being kidnapped several times by various, scheming and incompetent men. The basic premise is along the lines of a really juicy soap opera, falling just short of shocking resurrection (though this film nearly contains a parallel for it when a man thought dead, isnt). 

The story bobs and weaves across a variety of kidnapping attempts behind motives that, aside from the good old-fashioned cheating suitor, are never clearly explained. In the end, the only male in the film who performs as anything resembling a hero is the hunchback bellringer Quasimodo when he rescues the gypsy Esmeralda (Patsy Ruth Miller) and offers her sanctuary inside Notre Dame as a legion of vagrants mount an attack on the massive cathedral.

Credit to Eureka Entertainment

The motivation for Quasimodos compassion emerges from Esmeraldas respect for him. Shes the one person who treats him with sympathy and kindness after hes bullied and lashed before a crowd of people as hes crowned King of the Fools. Quasimodos heroism comes as a refreshing take on the traditional rescue. His motives arent steeped in love, lust, or romance, much less any sort of bravado, but rather grounded in kindness. 

The Hunchback of Notre Dame premiered in the height of the silent film era. Its excessive plot requires an amount of patience and attention. The prospect of watching a silent film these days is usually met with a degree of respectful apprehension. One must prepare for the event of watching a silent film. The idea that only music will be present to guide viewers through actually paying attention to the action as the occasional narrative insert moves the story along is an embarrassingly relatable assertion. That said, audiences will be relieved to know that The Hunchback of Notre Dame clips along at a cracking pace. In fact, its convoluted narrative is almost too much for the mildly toilsome process of watching a silent film. So much happens in such a short amount of time that the story becomes a little confusing to follow, but the execution is a testament to the films efficiency.  

Audiences will find any other silent film apprehensions swiftly abated upon the appearance of Lon Chaneys Quasimodo and the enormous, lavish set pieces that dress the film. The Hunchback was a passion project of Chaneys that hed sought to get off the ground for several years. His performance as the cathedral chimera evokes a tangible grotesqueness that is as visually off-putting to the audience as it is to the people who seek to abuse him for his deformities. Chaney additionally applied his own makeup and likely acted as director for much of the film. Wallace Worsley is credited as Director but only after Chaneys original choice, Erich von Stroheim, was fired by Universal chief Irving Thalberg before production even started. Some have suggested that Worsley was merely a craftsman who managed production while Chaney directed the performances.

The Hunchback of Notre Dame is presented in high-definition on Blu-ray Disc from Eureka Entertainments Masters of Cinema imprint. The disc boasts a 4K restoration of a 16mm print, a haunting score by Nora Kroll-Rosenbaum and Laura Karpman, and a new audio commentary by author and critic Kim Newman and author Stephen Jones. Two new featurettes with Newman and film historian Jonathan Rigby provide a wealth of insight into the history of The Hunchback on film as well as Universals 1923 production.

The role of the underdog is a thankless one; in the case of Quasimodo, its quite tragic. And in what is otherwise a pretty kooky plot, The Hunchback of Notre Dame not only appeals to our need to see the bullies get whats coming to them but doubly satisfies with terrific spectacle and charismatic performances.

Lucas Hardwick

When he’s not working as a Sasquatch stand-in for sleazy European films, Lucas Hardwick spends time writing film essays and reviews for We Belong Dead and Screem magazines. Lucas also enjoys writing horror shorts and has earned Quarterfinalist status in the Killer Shorts and HorrOrigins screenwriting contests. You can find Lucas’ shorts on Coverfly.

 

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