Freaks (1932)--Loving Cup Scene
1 2017-08-01T17:22:25+00:00 Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia c90233dd07144836ce2dedca73e59366be819522 3 1 The scene takes place at the wedding of Hans and Cleopatra where the circus performers perform a ritual to make Cleopatra one of them; an offer that Cleopatra rejects. plain 2017-08-01T17:22:25+00:00 Critical Commons 1932 Tod Browning Video 2014-07-07T21:17:51Z Freaks Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia c90233dd07144836ce2dedca73e59366be819522This page is referenced by:
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Film and "Freaks"
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With the medium of film’s increasing popularity in the early 20th Century came new grounds for the representation of non-normative bodies. Though some short films were produced by sideshows, and others were created for medical purposes, the most famous and enduring example from this era is Tod Browning’s 1932 film Freaks, produced by MGM. Fresh off the heels of his 1931 success, Dracula, there were great expectations at the time of the film’s release. Browning held auditions for the ensemble of “freaks” that would lead the film, and ended up with many of the top performers of the time. Despite the producer’s insistence that what was portrayed was close in keeping with the conditions of real circuses, many critics and audience members alike found the film to be morally objectionable, and indeed its lack of success at the box office mirrored these attitudes.
The plot of the film revolves around Hans, a little person who has become infatuated with Cleopatra, a trapeze artist born of “normal” proportions. After much courting, Cleopatra agrees to marry Hans, though the viewer is made aware that she is only interested in the fortune he has inherited through the warnings of Frieda, another little person employed by the Circus as a bare-back rider. The scene shown here has become one of the film’s most iconic, portraying the groups’ intended acceptance of Cleopatra as “one of us,” and ultimately her vitriolic rejection of their otherness.
Though the film attempts to portray its group of “freaks” sympathetically, imbuing them with a sense of humanity and dignity at times, it ultimately portrays them too frequently, and finally, as “monsters,” and MGM ultimately pulled the film shortly after its release, relegating it temporarily to obscurity, and ultimately ensuring its place as a divisive cult classic.