• Post category:Movies
  • Post last modified:July 13, 2021

Mad Love

DEAD HANDS THAT LIVE… AND LOVE… AND KILL! 

When concert pianist Stephen Orlac’s (Colin Clive) hands are crushed in an accident, Dr. Gogol (Peter Lorre) is hired to give him a new pair in a transplant… but they belonged to a killer. Karl Freund, a cinematographer who directed the greatest version of The Mummy in 1932, knew how to conjure horrifying images and this absurd and twisted chiller is a minor gem. In his first American film, Lorre is perfect as the bald genius who’s simply looking for a little love; his Gogol is a scary but ultimately pathetic and vulnerable man. Clive fell victim to his monster in Frankenstein (1931), and that’s pretty much his destiny here again.

1935-U.S. 70 min. B/W. Produced by John Considine, Jr. Directed by Karl Freund. Screenplay: P.J. Wolfson, John L. Balderston. Novel: Maurice Renard (”The Hands of Orlac”). Cast: Peter Lorre (Dr. Gogol), Frances Drake (Yvonne Orlac), Colin Clive (Stephen Orlac), Ted Healy, Sara Haden, Edward Brophy.

Trivia: Alternative title: The Hands of Orlac. Another later version of the story is The Hands of Orlac (1960).

Last word: “Make-up’s an excuse for an inability to act. You can cheat people with a lot of make-up. An actor should find his expressions in his naked face. I would rather depend on facial expressions and the right shading of light to get the effect I desire, instead of resorting to the actual methods of disguise. [Shaving my head] gives the idea that this character thinks of his science only and not of personal appearance.” (Lorre, “The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre”)

 

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