Film Review
Based on John Willard's 1922 hit Broadway play of the same title,
Universal's first production of
The
Cat and the Canary established the 'old dark house' scenario as
a major sub-genre in movie horror, one that remained hugely popular
until the 1950s and has continued to inspire successive generations of
filmmakers. It was by no means the first film of this kind but it
is unquestionably the most influential, and was the main point of
reference for James Whale's subsequent
The Old Dark House
(1932). Directed by the German expressionist filmmaker Paul Leni,
the original film version of
The Cat
and the Canary has a visual flair and sustained mood of
spine-chilling expectancy that none of its many remakes comes close to
matching. It's not only a superlative entry in Universal's run of
classic horror films, it is also deliriously funny, one of cinema's
most successful attempts at combining horror and comedy.
Paul Leni was not only a film director of exceptional ability, he was
also an accomplished set designer, as his work on this film amply bears
out. The cavernous interiors of the crumbling old mansion in
which most of the film is set are powerfully evocative of the
nightmarish Gothic fantasies of the 19th century and would provide a
template for subsequent horror films, including all those that
Universal would subsequently make, most notably
Dracula
(1931) and
Frankenstein (1931).
Leni's roots in expressionism can be seen not only in the set design
but also in the atmospheric lighting and subtly unnerving camerawork,
which add to the sense of lurking menace that pervades the film.
The stark expressionistic motif which begins the film - a dying old man
surrounded by gigantic cats like a bird in a cage - is constantly in our
minds as the heroine (superbly played by silent film diva Laura La
Plante) becomes increasingly conscious of the threat that surrounds her.
The Cat and the Canary could
easily have been a straight horror film, as chilling as Universal's
previous
The Phantom of the Opera
(1925), but it functions just as well as a black comedy. Apart
from La Plante's strait-laced Annabelle, every other character has a
disturbing hint of borderline lunacy about him or her, and much fun is
to be had in guessing who the villain of the piece might be.
Lucien Littlefield's creepy Dr Lazar is a barefaced homage to Werner
Krauss's sinister doctor in Robert Wiene's
Das Cabinet des Dr Caligari
(1920), the terror-infused keystone of all horror films. The
eccentric performances are humorous but also a tad frightening, and we
soon have reason to think that the entire West family might be prone to
lunacy.
Had he been less constrained by the narrative, Leni would doubtless
have done more to play up the suggestion that supernatural forces are
at work, using more point-of-view shots and camera effects to blur the
boundary between reality and imagination. The first glimpse of
'the monster' (an unconvincing werewolf hand) comes as a slight
disappointment, and from this point on the horror has to play second
fiddle to the humour - not that this in any way diminishes the film's
entertainment value.
The Cat
and the Canary is a suspenseful, eerily weird comedy delight -
the most enjoyable of Universal's silent horror films and vastly
superior to every one of the copycat films that it inspired.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
As millionaire Cyrus West nears death, his relatives descend on his
ancient mausoleum of a house like cats around a canary. Driven
insane, he stipulates that his last will and testament shall not be
opened until twenty years after his death. Twenty years on,
West's surviving relatives return to the house for the reading of the
will. To everyone's surprise, West leaves his entire estate to
his young niece, Annabelle, on condition that she is judged to be
sane by a physician. If Annabelle is found not to be in
possession of her faculties, the fortune passes to the person named in
a second envelope in West's safe. As the family prepares for
dinner, an asylum guard suddenly turns up with the news that a
dangerous lunatic is at large and may have taken sanctuary in the
house. West's lawyer Crosby realises that the second envelope may
reveal the identity of the mad man, but before he can divulge his name
to Annabelle he is attacked and murdered by a hideously deformed
monster. The Cat has claimed his first
victim...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.