Merry-Go-Round

Reviewed by: Copans

January 19, 1999

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I saw a print at the Brussels Cinemateque years ago. I know that the MOMA in NY owns one as well.

As you probably know, Thalberg took Von Stroheim (and Wallace Beery) off the project, replacing them with Rupert Julian and George Siegmann (of not very happy memory as the brutish mulatto in "Birth of a Nation"). The project remains very clearly a Stroheim work. The two stars, Mary Philbin and Norman Kerry, appear 2 years later in the same director's "Phantom of the Opera", in which I would say that pretty much stink. What is wooden in the later film is very much "control" and "understatement" in the "Merry-Go-Round". Among great silent film performances, I think Philbin's performance surpasses Gish's in "The Wind". (It's not incandescent like Louise Brooks, but she's a force of nature, so it's probably not fair to compare her to other actresses.) Philbin was apparently distraught that Mr. Von was taken away from her.

I've only seen the movie once, so I can't be thoroughly trusted. I have found no one (other than the Brussels audience who gave it a standing ovation) who feels anywhere as strongly as I do. See it if you possibly can. It has amazing juxtapositions of observation of human character (the hunchback gnoshing on a pickle) and wild expressionism. The orangutan as nemesis is one of the great scenes in movie history.

I've not seen "Queen Kelly", but M-G-R my favorite Stroheim so far.

 

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