Veidt, The Man Who Laughs (1928)

Film Still

 

1928, USA
Rare vintage gelatin silver print
8 x 10 inches (20 x 25 cm)
Photograph by Jack Freulich, head of Universal's still department in the 1920s.
Freulich’s signature in the negative lower right.
Original 1928 stamp on verso.
Fine

Veidt stars as Gwynplaine, a nobleman's son who is kidnapped by a political enemy, and then is mutilated by a gypsy "surgeon" who carves a monstrous smile upon his face. Finding shelter in a traveling freakshow, he falls in love with a blind girl (The Phantom of the Opera's Mary Philbin), the one person who cannot be repulsed by his appearance. As years pass, the hand of fate draws Gwynplaine back into the world of political intrigue. He becomes the plaything of a jaded duchess (Freaks Olga Baclanova), and his enemies renew their efforts to control him. - Kino International

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THE MAN WHO LAUGHS (1928)
In an effort to top the critical and financial success of The Hunchback of Notre Dame and The Phantom of the Opera, studio head Carl Laemmle recruited two influential artists of the German Expressionist school: actor Conrad Veidt (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari) and director Paul Leni (Waxworks). The shadowy exteriors, the carnival setting, the demonically misshapen "hero" made The Man Who Laughs something entirely new to American cinema -- the foundation upon which the classic Universal horror films would be built.