fbpx
Wikipedia

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920 Paramount film)

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is a 1920 American silent horror film produced by Famous Players–Lasky and released through Paramount/Artcraft. The film, which stars John Barrymore, is an adaptation of the 1886 novella Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson.[4] John S. Robertson directed the production, and Clara Beranger wrote the screenplay, based on the 1887 stage play by Thomas Russell Sullivan that in turn was based on the novel.[1][4]

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn S. Robertson
Written byClara Beranger
Thomas Russell Sullivan (1887 stage play)[1]
Based onStrange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Produced byAdolph Zukor
Jesse L. Lasky
StarringJohn Barrymore
Martha Mansfield
Charles W. Lane
Nita Naldi
CinematographyRoy F. Overbaugh
Production
company
Famous Players–Lasky/Artcraft Pictures
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
March 28, 1920 (New York premiere)[2][3]
Running time
79 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguagesSilent film
English intertitles

Set in late Victorian London, the film portrays the tragic consequences of a doctor's experiments in separating the dual personalities he thinks define all humans: one good, the other evil.[5] The film is now in the public domain.[6]

Plot edit

Dr Henry Jekyll lives and works in London. When not treating the poor at his free clinic, he works long hours in his laboratory, leaving little time for his sweetheart, Millicent. Sir George Carew, Millicent's father, is irritated by Jekyll's highmindedness, observing that "No man could be as good as he looks."[7] After dinner one evening, Sir George lectures Jekyll about his lifestyle, insisting that every man is fundamentally composed of two "selves" which are in continual conflict. He opines that "a man cannot destroy the savage in him by denying its impulses", and that "the only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it." He takes Jekyll to a nightclub and arranges a liaison with Gina, one of the dancers. Jekyll backs away.

The full film

Reflecting on Sir George's comments, Jekyll begins private research into ways of separating out the two basic natures of man, the good and the evil. He manages to develop a potion that transforms him into a hideous, evil counterpart that he calls "Hyde", along with a counter-potion to reverse the effect. As Hyde, Jekyll is not recognizable as himself, so to facilitate his evil counterpart's access to his home and laboratory, the doctor informs his servant Poole that his friend Mr. Hyde is to have full access.

Jekyll begins to live a double life: by day a compassionate and gentlemanly doctor, and by night a lustful, hunchbacked creature who ventures out to opium dens, bars, and music halls to satisfy his "dark indulgences". He rents a small furnished room and brings Gina to live with him. Soon, however, Hyde tires of her company and ejects her. Each time Jekyll takes the potion to become Hyde, he becomes increasingly depraved and physically more hideous.

Jekyll neglects Millicent, who is alarmed by his absence. Sir George calls on the doctor, but he is not at home. In a nearby street, Hyde knocks a small boy to the ground. To make recompense, he goes to the doctor's home and returns with a check which he gives to the injured boy's father. Sir George notices that the check has been signed by Dr. Jekyll.

Sir George hastens to the doctor's laboratory, where he contronts Jekyll and demands to know about his relationship with Hyde. His threat to refuse consent to his daughter's marriage triggers Jekyll's retransformation back to his evil form. Horrified at witnessing the change, Sir George flees. Hyde catches him in the courtyard and beats him to death with his walking stick. After destroying any evidence that might link him to Jekyll, Hyde returns to the laboratory where he drinks the last of the counter-potion.

In the ensuing days, while Millicent mourns over her father’s murder, Jekyll is tormented by the thoughts of his misdeeds as Hyde. Unable to procure further supplies of the drug needed to make the counter-potion, Jekyll confines himself to his locked laboratory, fearing he might become Hyde at any moment.

Millicent finally goes to see him, and as she knocks on the door he begins to transform. After letting her in and locking the door, Hyde takes the terrified Millicent into his arms. Suddenly, he starts convulsing. Millicent shouts for help, attracting Poole and two of Jekyll's friends. They enter to find Hyde sitting in a chair, dead, having taken poison. They watch with astonishment as Hyde transforms back into the doctor. As the film ends, Millicent grieves next to the body of her suitor.

 
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 lantern slide

Cast edit

Uncredited edit

  • J. Malcolm Dunn as John Utterson, friend of Jekyll
  • George Stevens as Poole, Jekyll's butler
  • Alma Aiken as distraught woman in Jekyll's office
  • Julia Hurley[8] as Hyde's old landlady
  • Edgard Varèse as policeman
  • Blanche Ring as woman with elderly man in music hall
  • Ferdinand Gottschalk as elderly man in music hall
  • May Robson as old harridan standing outside music hall

Production notes edit

 
A 1920 lobby poster depicting the dashing and “good” Dr. Henry Jekyll
  • The early part of Jekyll's initial transformation into Hyde was achieved with no makeup, instead relying solely on Barrymore's ability to contort his face and body. The first time Hyde reverts to Jekyll, one of Hyde's prosthetic fingers can be seen flying across the screen, having been shaken loose by Barrymore's convulsions.[9]
  • After Nita Naldi's death in 1961, The New York Times noted in its obituary of the actress that it was John Barrymore who had "obtained a part for her in the film, 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,'" after he "spotted" her dancing at the Winter Garden Theatre in Manhattan.[10]

1920 screenplay alterations edit

  • The character of Millicent Carew does not appear in Stevenson's original novel, but rather in the 1887 stage version by Thomas Russell Sullivan starring Richard Mansfield. This 1920 film version used the play's concept of Jekyll being engaged to Carew's daughter, and Hyde beginning a dalliance with an attractive yet chaste dance-hall girl whom he destroys, to inject a coarse sexual undercurrent into Hyde's personality that Stevenson did not include in his novel.[11]
  • Beranger's screenplay strayed further from Stevenson's novel than any of the previous silent film adaptations, depicting Dr. Jekyll as a handsome, selfless, charitable saint, so "beautiful" physically as to appear "almost Godlike". She even noted that a halo effect should appear around him in certain scenes, while the character in the novel (a much older man) had by this stage in his life indulged in many guilty pleasures and was "duplicitous" to his friends.[11]
  • Beranger also has Hyde transform back into the handsome Dr. Jekyll after he dies from the poison, his profile shown in a beatific close-up, hinting that he has redeemed himself through suicide. In the novel, Stevenson has Jekyll die as Hyde and be forced to remain in "that damning form" for all eternity.[11]
  • Troy Howarth notes that this was the first adaptation of the novel that elevated the (George) Carew character to such prominence in the plot, making him "basically a variation on Oscar Wilde's Lord Henry Wotten (from Wilde's 1890 novel The Picture of Dorian Gray). Both men are sophisticated cads with a cynical point of view, and they both tempt the protagonists to ruin." By making Jekyll into "an easily manipulated pawn", the filmmakers make him "less responsible for his own actions and fate", and more "sympathetic".[12] In her screenplay, Beranger writes of Carew, "Sir George waxes eloquent in his philosophy of Hedonism".[11]
  • Another connection to Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray is the way Beranger has Hyde devolve into a more inhuman monster as he commits each evil deed. She noted in the script, "Though at first Hyde is misshapen and hideous...he is nothing like the unspeakable, vile-looking creature that he is at the end of the picture. This should be a gradual development of evil" (Hyde's bald head develops a strange point and his overbite becomes much more pronounced as the film proceeds).[11]

Reception edit

Critical reception, 1920 edit

In 1920, film critics in the trade media and in fan-based publications generally gave high marks to Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and, not surprisingly, focused chiefly on John Barrymore. The popular trade paper Variety described the production as a "fine and dignified presentation" with an "excellent" performance by Barrymore despite what the paper viewed as the absurd nature of the plot:

The story itself is ridiculous, judged by modern standards, but that doesn't alter its value as a medium for Mr. Barrymore...As the handsome young Dr. Jekyll his natural beauty of form and feature stand him in good stead and he offers a marvelous depiction of bestiality in the transformed personality of "Mr. Hyde." Yet he was always Jack Barrymore, which is the most adverse comment that could be made upon the production....[13]

In the weeks following the release of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in March 1920, media reports about the box-office receipts being generated by the film and the exorbitant prices being spent by "movie palaces" to rent it attest to the production's commercial success. On April 2, for example, Variety reported that the Rivoli Theatre, a prestigious entertainment venue in New York City, was already earning "enormous takings" from its screenings of the film.[14][15] Variety also informed its readers that the Rivoli's management had paid $10,000 to the film's distributor just to rent the picture, which it noted was "probably a record price for a straight rental anywhere in the world".[14]

With regard to broader public reaction to Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in 1920, fan-based publications and individual moviegoers expressed more mixed reactions to the film than critics in entertainment trade papers.[16] Some of those reviewers, like the title characters in the film, were "split", harboring both decidedly positive and negative opinions about the production.[16] Photoplay, a widely read New York-based monthly, provides one example of such mixed reactions. In the magazine's June 1920 issue, critic Burns Mantle describes two of his friends' diametric responses to the picture. One friend praised it as "a perfect sample" of filmmaking, destined to be a "classic" in cinematic history; the other friend was appalled by it. As to his latter friend, Mantle adds that she "insists as strenuously that 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' gave her a most terrific attack of the blues from which she has yet to recover, nor expects to ever fully recover."[16] Mantle's own feelings about the much-anticipated release were not so clear-cut:

My own reaction to this cinemagraphic tour de force strikes somewhere between those two [friends]. I left the picture cold, not to say clammy, but eager to sing the praises of J. Barrymore...by which he reaches the peak of his screen achievements. Eager to also declare it to be the finest bit of directing John Stewart Robertson has ever done...and a job that places him with the first half dozen intelligent directors in the field. But I felt a lot like my other friend who would keep her children away from it and suffer nary a pang of disappointment if I were told I should never look upon its likes again. Frankly I do not care for horrors, either on screen or stage.[16]

 
Barrymore in full makeup as the "ghastly" and evil Mr. Hyde

Frederick James Smith, the "Celluloid Critic" for Motion Picture Classic, another major fan publication, considered Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde "a finely workmanlike piece of screencraft".[17] He did, though, caution his readers about Barrymore's appearance as Jekyll's inner beast. "His Hyde", Smith observed, "is a terrible being, with the most ghastly make-up we recall ever seeing in the films."[17] In fact, audience exposure to Barrymore's Hyde became a point of concern expressed in some reviews, with his screen presence threatening the mental and even physical health of the public, especially for children exposed to the actor's "ghoulish" character and the film’s possible "pre-natal influences" on expectant mothers.[16][17]

Whatever reservations or warnings that film critics may have expressed about Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, they did not deter throngs of moviegoers in 1920 from seeing what Photoplay predicted would "easily become the most talked of picture of the time."[16] The magazine illustrated that popularity when it reported, "A door and two windows were broken by the crowds that tried to see it on its first showing in New York".[16]

More recent assessments edit

In 2014, American film critic and historian Leonard Maltin gave this version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde three stars on a four-star rating scale. Maltin also complimented Barrymore's performances as both Jekyll and Hyde, as well as the film's overall production, describing it as "well made".[18]

As of 2020, the film has an approval rating of 92% based on 13 reviews, with an average rating of 7.75/10, on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes.[19]

Accolades edit

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

Home media edit

It was first released on VHS by Thorn EMI Video in June 1982.[citation needed] Years later, it was released to DVD by Kino on Video on October 9, 2001.[22]

See also edit

References and notes edit

  1. ^ a b Kinnard,Roy (1995). "Horror in Silent Films". McFarland and Company Inc. ISBN 0-7864-0036-6. Page 109.
  2. ^ "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920)", Turner Classic Movies (TCM), Turner Broadcasting System, Time Warner, Inc., New York, N.Y. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  3. ^ "Super-Special Now Available", Motion Picture News, April 1920, p. 3107
  4. ^ a b "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920)", production details, American Film Institute (AFI), Los Angeles California. Retrieved November 3, 2018.
  5. ^ Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde at the silentera database; with DVD specifics
  6. ^ The American Film Institute Catalog Feature Films: 1911-20 by The American Film Institute, c.1988
  7. ^ Quotations of dialogue in this page's summary of the plot are transcribed from the 1920 film's intertitles.
  8. ^ San Francisco Chronicle, Sunday April 25, 1920; CINEMA, "John Barrymore and Julia Hurley (Imperial)", caption of image from Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (courtesy of ebay for scanned newspaper article).
  9. ^ Hardy, Phil (1995). The Overlook Film Encyclopedia. New York, N.Y.: Overlook Press, 1995, vol. 3, p. 26. ISBN 0-87951-624-0. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  10. ^ "Nita Naldi of Silent Films Dies; Won Fame Opposite Valentino", obituary, The New York Times, February 18, 1961, [unspecified page]. Obituary linked through "The Hitchcock Zone" online collections. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  11. ^ a b c d e Haberman, Steve (2003). Silent Screams. Midnight Marquee Press. p. 102. ISBN 978-1-936168-15-6.
  12. ^ Workman, Christopher; Howarth, Troy (2016). Tome of Terror: Horror Films of the Silent Era. Midnight Marquee Press. p. 2167. ISBN 978-1936168-68-2.
  13. ^ "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde", review, Variety (New York, N.Y.), April 2, 1920, p. 93, col. 1. Internet Archive, San Francisco. Retrieved November 2, 2018.
  14. ^ a b "$10,000 for 'Jekyll-Hyde'", review, Variety (New York, N.Y.), April 2, 1920, p. 97, col. 1-2. Internet Archive. Retrieved November 3, 2018.
  15. ^ "Rivoli Theatre", brief history and images of the theatre, The New York City (NYC) Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Mantle, Burns; and managing editors of Photoplay (1920). "The Shadow Stage", review of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Photoplay (New York, N.Y.), June 1920, p. 66-67. Internet Archive. Retrieved November 3, 2018.
  17. ^ a b c Smith, Frederick James (1920). "The Newest Photoplays in Review", Motion Picture Classic (Brooklyn, New York), June 1920, p. "Forty-five". Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  18. ^ Maltin, Leonard; Sader, Luke; Carson, Darwyn. Leonard Maltin's 2014 Movie Guide. Penguin Press. p. 390. ISBN 978-0-451-41810-4.
  19. ^ "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved August 17, 2020.
  20. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills Nominees" (PDF). Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  21. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Heroes & Villains Nominees" (PDF). Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  22. ^ Rivero, Enrique (August 17, 2001). "Silent Movies Make Noise on DVD". hive4media.com. from the original on September 11, 2001. Retrieved September 7, 2019.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920 Paramount film) at Wikimedia Commons
  •   The full text of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920 Robertson film) at Wikisource
  •   Quotations related to Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920 film) at Wikiquote
  • Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde at IMDb  
  • Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde at AllMovie
  • Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920) at Rotten Tomatoes
  • The AFI Catalog of Feature Films: Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde

jekyll, hyde, 1920, paramount, film, jekyll, hyde, 1920, american, silent, horror, film, produced, famous, players, lasky, released, through, paramount, artcraft, film, which, stars, john, barrymore, adaptation, 1886, novella, strange, case, jekyll, hyde, robe. Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is a 1920 American silent horror film produced by Famous Players Lasky and released through Paramount Artcraft The film which stars John Barrymore is an adaptation of the 1886 novella Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson 4 John S Robertson directed the production and Clara Beranger wrote the screenplay based on the 1887 stage play by Thomas Russell Sullivan that in turn was based on the novel 1 4 Dr Jekyll and Mr HydeTheatrical release posterDirected byJohn S RobertsonWritten byClara Beranger Thomas Russell Sullivan 1887 stage play 1 Based onStrange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hydeby Robert Louis StevensonProduced byAdolph ZukorJesse L LaskyStarringJohn BarrymoreMartha MansfieldCharles W LaneNita NaldiCinematographyRoy F OverbaughProductioncompanyFamous Players Lasky Artcraft PicturesDistributed byParamount PicturesRelease dateMarch 28 1920 New York premiere 2 3 Running time79 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguagesSilent film English intertitlesSet in late Victorian London the film portrays the tragic consequences of a doctor s experiments in separating the dual personalities he thinks define all humans one good the other evil 5 The film is now in the public domain 6 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 2 1 Uncredited 3 Production notes 4 1920 screenplay alterations 5 Reception 5 1 Critical reception 1920 5 2 More recent assessments 5 3 Accolades 5 4 Home media 6 See also 7 References and notes 8 External linksPlot editDr Henry Jekyll lives and works in London When not treating the poor at his free clinic he works long hours in his laboratory leaving little time for his sweetheart Millicent Sir George Carew Millicent s father is irritated by Jekyll s highmindedness observing that No man could be as good as he looks 7 After dinner one evening Sir George lectures Jekyll about his lifestyle insisting that every man is fundamentally composed of two selves which are in continual conflict He opines that a man cannot destroy the savage in him by denying its impulses and that the only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it He takes Jekyll to a nightclub and arranges a liaison with Gina one of the dancers Jekyll backs away source source source source source The full filmReflecting on Sir George s comments Jekyll begins private research into ways of separating out the two basic natures of man the good and the evil He manages to develop a potion that transforms him into a hideous evil counterpart that he calls Hyde along with a counter potion to reverse the effect As Hyde Jekyll is not recognizable as himself so to facilitate his evil counterpart s access to his home and laboratory the doctor informs his servant Poole that his friend Mr Hyde is to have full access Jekyll begins to live a double life by day a compassionate and gentlemanly doctor and by night a lustful hunchbacked creature who ventures out to opium dens bars and music halls to satisfy his dark indulgences He rents a small furnished room and brings Gina to live with him Soon however Hyde tires of her company and ejects her Each time Jekyll takes the potion to become Hyde he becomes increasingly depraved and physically more hideous Jekyll neglects Millicent who is alarmed by his absence Sir George calls on the doctor but he is not at home In a nearby street Hyde knocks a small boy to the ground To make recompense he goes to the doctor s home and returns with a check which he gives to the injured boy s father Sir George notices that the check has been signed by Dr Jekyll Sir George hastens to the doctor s laboratory where he contronts Jekyll and demands to know about his relationship with Hyde His threat to refuse consent to his daughter s marriage triggers Jekyll s retransformation back to his evil form Horrified at witnessing the change Sir George flees Hyde catches him in the courtyard and beats him to death with his walking stick After destroying any evidence that might link him to Jekyll Hyde returns to the laboratory where he drinks the last of the counter potion In the ensuing days while Millicent mourns over her father s murder Jekyll is tormented by the thoughts of his misdeeds as Hyde Unable to procure further supplies of the drug needed to make the counter potion Jekyll confines himself to his locked laboratory fearing he might become Hyde at any moment Millicent finally goes to see him and as she knocks on the door he begins to transform After letting her in and locking the door Hyde takes the terrified Millicent into his arms Suddenly he starts convulsing Millicent shouts for help attracting Poole and two of Jekyll s friends They enter to find Hyde sitting in a chair dead having taken poison They watch with astonishment as Hyde transforms back into the doctor As the film ends Millicent grieves next to the body of her suitor nbsp Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 lantern slideCast editJohn Barrymore as Dr Henry Jekyll Mr Hyde giant spider in dream Martha Mansfield as Millicent Carewe Sir George s daughter Nita Naldi as Gina Italian exotic dancer Brandon Hurst as Sir George Carewe Charles Willis Lane as Dr Richard Lanyon friend of Jekyll Cecil Clovelly as Edward Enfield Louis Wolheim as music hall proprietorUncredited edit J Malcolm Dunn as John Utterson friend of Jekyll George Stevens as Poole Jekyll s butler Alma Aiken as distraught woman in Jekyll s office Julia Hurley 8 as Hyde s old landlady Edgard Varese as policeman Blanche Ring as woman with elderly man in music hall Ferdinand Gottschalk as elderly man in music hall May Robson as old harridan standing outside music hallProduction notes edit nbsp A 1920 lobby poster depicting the dashing and good Dr Henry JekyllThe early part of Jekyll s initial transformation into Hyde was achieved with no makeup instead relying solely on Barrymore s ability to contort his face and body The first time Hyde reverts to Jekyll one of Hyde s prosthetic fingers can be seen flying across the screen having been shaken loose by Barrymore s convulsions 9 After Nita Naldi s death in 1961 The New York Times noted in its obituary of the actress that it was John Barrymore who had obtained a part for her in the film Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde after he spotted her dancing at the Winter Garden Theatre in Manhattan 10 1920 screenplay alterations editThis section relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 Paramount film news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2020 The character of Millicent Carew does not appear in Stevenson s original novel but rather in the 1887 stage version by Thomas Russell Sullivan starring Richard Mansfield This 1920 film version used the play s concept of Jekyll being engaged to Carew s daughter and Hyde beginning a dalliance with an attractive yet chaste dance hall girl whom he destroys to inject a coarse sexual undercurrent into Hyde s personality that Stevenson did not include in his novel 11 Beranger s screenplay strayed further from Stevenson s novel than any of the previous silent film adaptations depicting Dr Jekyll as a handsome selfless charitable saint so beautiful physically as to appear almost Godlike She even noted that a halo effect should appear around him in certain scenes while the character in the novel a much older man had by this stage in his life indulged in many guilty pleasures and was duplicitous to his friends 11 Beranger also has Hyde transform back into the handsome Dr Jekyll after he dies from the poison his profile shown in a beatific close up hinting that he has redeemed himself through suicide In the novel Stevenson has Jekyll die as Hyde and be forced to remain in that damning form for all eternity 11 Troy Howarth notes that this was the first adaptation of the novel that elevated the George Carew character to such prominence in the plot making him basically a variation on Oscar Wilde s Lord Henry Wotten from Wilde s 1890 novel The Picture of Dorian Gray Both men are sophisticated cads with a cynical point of view and they both tempt the protagonists to ruin By making Jekyll into an easily manipulated pawn the filmmakers make him less responsible for his own actions and fate and more sympathetic 12 In her screenplay Beranger writes of Carew Sir George waxes eloquent in his philosophy of Hedonism 11 Another connection to Wilde s The Picture of Dorian Gray is the way Beranger has Hyde devolve into a more inhuman monster as he commits each evil deed She noted in the script Though at first Hyde is misshapen and hideous he is nothing like the unspeakable vile looking creature that he is at the end of the picture This should be a gradual development of evil Hyde s bald head develops a strange point and his overbite becomes much more pronounced as the film proceeds 11 Reception editCritical reception 1920 editIn 1920 film critics in the trade media and in fan based publications generally gave high marks to Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and not surprisingly focused chiefly on John Barrymore The popular trade paper Variety described the production as a fine and dignified presentation with an excellent performance by Barrymore despite what the paper viewed as the absurd nature of the plot The story itself is ridiculous judged by modern standards but that doesn t alter its value as a medium for Mr Barrymore As the handsome young Dr Jekyll his natural beauty of form and feature stand him in good stead and he offers a marvelous depiction of bestiality in the transformed personality of Mr Hyde Yet he was always Jack Barrymore which is the most adverse comment that could be made upon the production 13 In the weeks following the release of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde in March 1920 media reports about the box office receipts being generated by the film and the exorbitant prices being spent by movie palaces to rent it attest to the production s commercial success On April 2 for example Variety reported that the Rivoli Theatre a prestigious entertainment venue in New York City was already earning enormous takings from its screenings of the film 14 15 Variety also informed its readers that the Rivoli s management had paid 10 000 to the film s distributor just to rent the picture which it noted was probably a record price for a straight rental anywhere in the world 14 With regard to broader public reaction to Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde in 1920 fan based publications and individual moviegoers expressed more mixed reactions to the film than critics in entertainment trade papers 16 Some of those reviewers like the title characters in the film were split harboring both decidedly positive and negative opinions about the production 16 Photoplay a widely read New York based monthly provides one example of such mixed reactions In the magazine s June 1920 issue critic Burns Mantle describes two of his friends diametric responses to the picture One friend praised it as a perfect sample of filmmaking destined to be a classic in cinematic history the other friend was appalled by it As to his latter friend Mantle adds that she insists as strenuously that Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde gave her a most terrific attack of the blues from which she has yet to recover nor expects to ever fully recover 16 Mantle s own feelings about the much anticipated release were not so clear cut My own reaction to this cinemagraphic tour de force strikes somewhere between those two friends I left the picture cold not to say clammy but eager to sing the praises of J Barrymore by which he reaches the peak of his screen achievements Eager to also declare it to be the finest bit of directing John Stewart Robertson has ever done and a job that places him with the first half dozen intelligent directors in the field But I felt a lot like my other friend who would keep her children away from it and suffer nary a pang of disappointment if I were told I should never look upon its likes again Frankly I do not care for horrors either on screen or stage 16 nbsp Barrymore in full makeup as the ghastly and evil Mr HydeFrederick James Smith the Celluloid Critic for Motion Picture Classic another major fan publication considered Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde a finely workmanlike piece of screencraft 17 He did though caution his readers about Barrymore s appearance as Jekyll s inner beast His Hyde Smith observed is a terrible being with the most ghastly make up we recall ever seeing in the films 17 In fact audience exposure to Barrymore s Hyde became a point of concern expressed in some reviews with his screen presence threatening the mental and even physical health of the public especially for children exposed to the actor s ghoulish character and the film s possible pre natal influences on expectant mothers 16 17 Whatever reservations or warnings that film critics may have expressed about Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde they did not deter throngs of moviegoers in 1920 from seeing what Photoplay predicted would easily become the most talked of picture of the time 16 The magazine illustrated that popularity when it reported A door and two windows were broken by the crowds that tried to see it on its first showing in New York 16 More recent assessments edit In 2014 American film critic and historian Leonard Maltin gave this version of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde three stars on a four star rating scale Maltin also complimented Barrymore s performances as both Jekyll and Hyde as well as the film s overall production describing it as well made 18 As of 2020 the film has an approval rating of 92 based on 13 reviews with an average rating of 7 75 10 on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes 19 Accolades edit The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists 2001 AFI s 100 Years 100 Thrills Nominated 20 2003 AFI s 100 Years 100 Heroes amp Villains Dr Jekyll Nominated Hero 21 Home media edit It was first released on VHS by Thorn EMI Video in June 1982 citation needed Years later it was released to DVD by Kino on Video on October 9 2001 22 See also editList of American films of 1920 The House That Shadows Built 1931 promotional film by Paramount John Barrymore on stage screen and radioReferences and notes edit a b Kinnard Roy 1995 Horror in Silent Films McFarland and Company Inc ISBN 0 7864 0036 6 Page 109 Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 Turner Classic Movies TCM Turner Broadcasting System Time Warner Inc New York N Y Retrieved November 4 2018 Super Special Now Available Motion Picture News April 1920 p 3107 a b Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 production details American Film Institute AFI Los Angeles California Retrieved November 3 2018 Dr Jekyll amp Mr Hyde at the silentera database with DVD specifics The American Film Institute Catalog Feature Films 1911 20 by The American Film Institute c 1988 Quotations of dialogue in this page s summary of the plot are transcribed from the 1920 film s intertitles San Francisco Chronicle Sunday April 25 1920 CINEMA John Barrymore and Julia Hurley Imperial caption of image from Dr Jekyll amp Mr Hyde courtesy of ebay for scanned newspaper article Hardy Phil 1995 The Overlook Film Encyclopedia New York N Y Overlook Press 1995 vol 3 p 26 ISBN 0 87951 624 0 Retrieved November 4 2018 Nita Naldi of Silent Films Dies Won Fame Opposite Valentino obituary The New York Times February 18 1961 unspecified page Obituary linked through The Hitchcock Zone online collections Retrieved November 5 2018 a b c d e Haberman Steve 2003 Silent Screams Midnight Marquee Press p 102 ISBN 978 1 936168 15 6 Workman Christopher Howarth Troy 2016 Tome of Terror Horror Films of the Silent Era Midnight Marquee Press p 2167 ISBN 978 1936168 68 2 Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde review Variety New York N Y April 2 1920 p 93 col 1 Internet Archive San Francisco Retrieved November 2 2018 a b 10 000 for Jekyll Hyde review Variety New York N Y April 2 1920 p 97 col 1 2 Internet Archive Retrieved November 3 2018 Rivoli Theatre brief history and images of the theatre The New York City NYC Chapter of the American Guild of Organists Retrieved November 4 2018 a b c d e f g Mantle Burns and managing editors of Photoplay 1920 The Shadow Stage review of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Photoplay New York N Y June 1920 p 66 67 Internet Archive Retrieved November 3 2018 a b c Smith Frederick James 1920 The Newest Photoplays in Review Motion Picture Classic Brooklyn New York June 1920 p Forty five Retrieved November 4 2018 Maltin Leonard Sader Luke Carson Darwyn Leonard Maltin s 2014 Movie Guide Penguin Press p 390 ISBN 978 0 451 41810 4 Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved August 17 2020 AFI s 100 Years 100 Thrills Nominees PDF Retrieved August 20 2016 AFI s 100 Years 100 Heroes amp Villains Nominees PDF Retrieved August 20 2016 Rivero Enrique August 17 2001 Silent Movies Make Noise on DVD hive4media com Archived from the original on September 11 2001 Retrieved September 7 2019 External links edit nbsp Media related to Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 Paramount film at Wikimedia Commons nbsp The full text of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 Robertson film at Wikisource nbsp Quotations related to Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 film at Wikiquote Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde at IMDb nbsp Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde at AllMovie Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 at Rotten Tomatoes The AFI Catalog of Feature Films Dr Jekyll amp Mr Hyde Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1920 Paramount film amp oldid 1198227605, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.