“Ancient traditions, when tested by the severe processes if modern investigation, commonly enough fade away into mere dream; but it is singular how often the dream turns out to have been a half-waking one, presaging a reality.”
-T.H.Huxley; The Book of Beast
“Men! The beasts! God would show wisdom if he took the hands from all of them!” –Nanon Zanzi
or… Mad Love Among the Limbless!
The Unknown(1927 USA 49mins)
Lon Chaney Sr as Alonso the Armless
Directed by Tod Browning with a screenplay by Waldemar Young (Island of Lost Souls, 1932). Story by Tod Browning, based on a novel by Mary Roberts Rinehart. (The Bat 1959). Cinematography by Merritt B. Gerstad (Watch on the Rhine 1943). Edited by Harry Reynolds and Errol Taggart. Art Direction by Cedric Gibbons and Richard Day (On the Waterfront, A Streetcar Named Desire) and Lucia Coulter, wardrobe.
Cast: Lon Chaney immortalizes the role of Alonzo the Armless, Joan Crawford plays Nanon Zanzi, Norman Kerry plays the strongman Malabar, John George is Alonzo’s sidekick Cojo, and Frank Lanning plays Costra, Nick De Ruiz as the circus owner and Nanon’s ruthless father, Zanzi.
Lon Chaney’s The Unknown is a dark, poetic ballet of obsession and transformation set beneath the lurid tents of a gypsy circus. In this silent masterwork, Chaney becomes Alonzo, a fugitive who masquerades as an armless knife-thrower, his uncanny dexterity with feet masking both his hidden arms and his criminal past. The heart of the film is Alonzo’s feverish love for his assistant, Nanon (Joan Crawford), whose pathological fear of men’s arms locks her heart away from ordinary affection.
When Nanon’s father discovers Alonzo’s secret and is murdered, Nanon glimpses only a telltale mark, a double thumb, unaware that her protector is the killer. In hopes of forever binding her to him, Alonzo submits to the ultimate sacrifice: the amputation of his own arms. But while he is gone, Nanon’s phobia is cured by the strongman Malabar, shattering Alonzo’s mad delusion. The film’s anguish crescendos in a bravura close-up, as the irony and heartbreak of his irreversible devotion contort Chaney’s face into a silent howl. A story of grotesque yearning and self-destruction, The Unknowndistills the wildest excesses of love into a nightmarishly intimate tragedy, where the boundaries of flesh and feeling dissolve beneath a mask of illusion
The Unknown is a beautifully disturbing film that gains a savage momentum the more you peer into the face of its poetically ugly story. As writer/historian David J. Skal states of the stage contraption at the film’s climax, “the Unknown itself is a perfectly constructed torture machine and arguably Browning’s most accomplished film.”
I want to use the term “Gothic embodiment” from Lina Wånggren’s May 22, 2013 article Gothic Embodiment: Lon Chaney and Affective Amputation because of her astute insight into the overreaching theme of The Unknown, which taps into the fear of castration and the horrific aspect of this bizarrely sensational L’amour Fou, which is both grim and grotesque. a French phrase meaning “mad love” or “crazy love,” referring to an intense, uncontrollable, and often self-destructive passion or infatuation that can be irrational and all-consuming.
Lon Chaney and Joan Crawford.Alonzo and Cojo enter the operating room. The sterile environment envelopes the two men.
Alonzo blackmails the surgeon for the mob into amputating both his arms and showing him his signature double thumbs.
For me, it was an unnerving, disquieting piece of the puzzle when I first watched Alonzo enter the stark surgical room to blackmail the surgeon into amputating both his arms and thereby cutting off his ability to embrace Nanon, his arms an extension of his maleness—the castration anxiety – fulfilled.
Lina Wånggren asks what is a Gothic body? Here she cites a few examples-
“Various scholars have theorized Gothic embodiment and physical difference in Gothic works, such as Judith Halberstam’s Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and the Technology of Monsters (1995) Recently, the collection Demons of the Body and Mind: Essays on Disability in Gothic Literature (2010), edited by Ruth Bienstock Anolik, fruitfully employs the framework of disability studies to study monstrosity in the Gothic. The collected essays focus on the ways in which Gothic texts respond to “˜human beings who are figured as inhuman because they do not align with the physical or mental standards of their society’.
The beautiful Joan Crawford, all of eighteen, and Lon Chaney Sr. in Tod Browning’s striking, disturbing The Unknown, 1927. The circus performer Alonzo the Armless goes to the extremes of amputation so that Joan Crawford’s character Nanon won’t feel threatened by his touch.
Lon Chaney has inhabited so many memorable roles, using theatrically exaggerated Gothic embodiment or characters who are ‘other’ on screen. What quickly comes to mind, of course, is Erik in Phantom of the Opera 1925, Quasimodo in 1925 as The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1923,and of course, the cruel yet redemptive Phrozo in The Penalty 1920.
Lon Chaney as Quasimodo in The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1923.
Chaney possessed the ability to express his innermost desires not only through intuitive emotional expressiveness, alongside his elaborate make-up, but also through the commanding physicality his roles asked of his body.
Alonzo the Armless is showing his arms.
Chaney was heavily inspired by clowns as a young man, fascinated by their personae’s duality. Alonzo is a remarkably complex character as Chaney offers us, with most of his performances, a man who can be simultaneously loathed and yet often wears a complex strata of sympathy as we see into his intricate psyche, A soul torn between tender shadows and stormy wrath. Alonzo is a violent misanthrope, yet he finds tenderness in his love for Nanon, ironically a woman who repels any love from men. The duality of the character exists in this… Chaney deftly balances his ill-spirited belligerence toward the world and his emotional undercurrents within, for the object of his love, the elusive and troubled Nanon.
Side-Kick Cojo is the only one privy to Alonzo’s secret identity, hiding out in the gypsy circus, and the fact that he does, in fact, have two good arms.
Chaney is drawn to these roles like moths to the flame — of men who suffer their differences at the hands of societal norms, exacting a sort of rule of vengeance. While completely cruel, he still manages to convey a deep and abiding pathos.
In one of my other favorite performances, he brings to life the complex Blizzard in The Penalty 1920. Both legs had been amputated as a child by an inept surgeon. This propels his character toward a harsh and unforgiving fate, a descent into a merciless void, one of cruelty, abuse, and a life of crime due to the hardship he endured by being an amputee.
A scene from the hat factory, Chaney as the cruel Blizzard in The Penalty.
His foes refer to him as ‘the cripple from hell.’ Blizzard’s pursuit is to exact revenge on the man who left him a cripple and the absolute objectification of evil. Blizzard’s body has been left imperfect, filling him with a taste for vengeance for those ‘mangled years’ of his childhood, years of being forced to live with his ‘physical difference.’
It is this desire for retribution, a burning ember that fuels the restless heart, seeking justice in the shadows where old wounds bleed, that drives the narrative so strongly. In this story of Gothic difference through the embodiment of amputation, amputation is manifested as a living symbol, a representation of sacrifice, loss, or transformation. Blizzard conceives of a grotesque way of punishing the doctor who rendered him rootless as a broken tree by having him amputate the legs of the daughter’s fiancé, then attach them to his own body.
Ethel Grey Terry and Lon Chaney in The Penalty 1920)- Chaney wearing fitted leather stumps that were painful in order to hide his legs.
While Chaney’s performance as Blizzard cultivates a nuanced portrayal of a criminally unhinged man molded by years of bitterness and an insatiable lust for retribution, it is his performance as Alonzo that truly hits the mark for me.
The Unknown creates a bizarre romantic notion that Alonzo the Armless can choose to have his arms removed for the object of his desire, Nanon, which elevates this Gothic Embodiment into the realm of what contemporary critics and filmmakers like David Cronenberg would cinematically cultivate as ‘body horror.’
Alonzo is also maliciously encouraged by his minion Cojo (John George), who acts like a devil imp, egging Alonzo on, down a more dangerous path of self-destruction. Many classical horror films use the expressly contemptuous ‘little’ evil sidekick as nefarious as the monster itself.
Cojo is the personification of the characteristic little evil sidekick.Cojo reminds Alonzo that he doesn’t have to use his feet in private to do all the things he can do with his two good hands.
The Unknown explores a profoundly unsettling and twisted dimension of love that transcends simple romantic tragedy, entering the realm of grotesque sacrifice and psychological torment. The film’s central act—our antihero Alonzo’s voluntary amputation of his own arms—is not merely a physical mutilation but a symbolic crucible forged by the wild, paradoxical demands of love shaped by fear and desire.
Nanon’s carnal phobia—an intense, almost primal terror of physical touch- renders ordinary expressions of affection impossible. This visceral repulsion creates a cruel paradox: Alonzo’s love cannot find safe harbor within her body unless the very tools of human intimacy, his arms, are rendered powerless. His self-amputation embodies an extremity of devotion, a grotesque mutilation meant to reassure and conquer her deepest fears. It’s a sacrifice that denies his own wholeness in a desperate attempt to claim her love, or at least her presence.
This love story differs radically from The Penalty, which also features physical disfigurement and vengeance but centers more decisively on themes of power lost and regained, and a more straightforward quest for personal justice. The Unknown, by contrast, investigates the darker, more labyrinthine corridors of the human psyche—how obsession mutates love into something both beautiful and horrifying, how the body becomes a battleground for emotional survival.
What emerges is a tale not just of sacrifice but of self-effacement and identity distortion. Alonzo’s mutilation is an anguished corporeal language that speaks to the impossible conditions of loving someone incapacitated by fear. It portrays love as something that can contort, deform, and even destroy the self in its extreme, revealing the grotesque beauty in that madness.
Ironically, he is rejected at the end of this queasy and grim story of unrequited love that turns on itself.
The Unknowncan be considered an allegory of sexual repression and traumatized masculinity. Going all Freudian on the film, one could relate the act of Alonzo’s amputation to that which is Freud’s castration anxiety.
Professor & Author Rick Worland refers to The Unknown and the idea of Alonzo’s amputation, both faked and eventually actualized, as “a fantastic work of psycho-sexual grotesquerie’ its amputation plot presenting a ‘fever dream of phallic symbolism, castration anxiety, and sexual terror.” Alonzo has rendered himself virtually impotent in a sexual way in order to satisfy Nanon’s need to be untouched.
Essentially, the idea of Gothic Embodiment and the fetishistic use of amputation in a psycho-sexual context can not overlook the idea of the act of simple ‘touch.’ The idea of Gothic Embodiment or ‘difference’ is inextricably linked to the act of touching and therefore an indirect link to frustrated intimacy. The human hands best embody this dual nature of touching and the sense of ‘feeling’. Both explore the way we touch and act as tools to explore or express our emotions in kind with another human. What I’d like to call ‘body dialogue.’
The Unknown released by MGM in 1927 and directed by Tod Browning in the horror genre popularly known for (Dracula 1931, & Freaks 1932) takes place at Antonio Zanzi’s ‘gypsy circus’ in old Madrid. The story unfolds as a bizarre love triangle between circus folk Alonzo the Armless, Nanon Zanzi, and Strongman Malabar the Mighty. Alonzo uses his feet to fire guns and throw knives at Nanon as part of their act.
The circus act itself is a destructive spectacle of masochism as Nanon Zanzi assists Alonzo in his death-defying act. Nanon is the daughter of the circus owner, Antonio Zanzi. Alonzo secretly desires Nanon. As part of their dangerously erotic performance that resembles contact, furthermore, penetration. But only in its flair for tease and excitement, the moving target Nanon is strapped to a board that spins. With each shot of the gun, the bullets remove one more article of Nanon’s clothes. Next, with his feet, Alonzo throws the penetrating knives that outline Nanon’s bikini-clad body perfectly.
Alonzo the Armless – the devil to his left side.
Alonzo the Armless can use shotguns to fire bullets that disrobe the beautiful Nanon.
Alonzo is described by the circus owner as “the sensation of sensations!’, and as the“wonder of wonders!”
Chaney collaborated with real-life armless double Paul Dismute, whose dexterity in the remarkable scenes where he uses his feet to handle objects such as strumming guitars, pouring wine, throwing knives, or lighting cigarettes. Tod Browning and cinematographer Merritt Gerstad (who also worked on Freaks) would use Chaney’s upper body and face within the shot frames. It was a brilliant choreography of the body and timing to give the illusion that Chaney was manipulating these objects by himself, while Dismute remained off-camera, handling the objects.
“Reflecting the growing public alarm over the moral tone of films in the late twenties The Unknown was the first film to be frankly and aggressively attacked in the press for it’s melodramatic  morbidity.”The New York Sun assured readers that “the suspicion that the picture might have been written by Nero, directed by Lucretia Borgia, constructed by the shade of Edgar Allan Poe and lighted by a well-known vivisectionist was absolutely groundless….The Sun admitted that The Unknown “may be just what the public wants. If it is- well, the good old days of the Roman Empire are upon us”The New York Daily Mirror suggested that “if you like to tear butterflies apart and see sausage made you may like the climax to The Unknown. … typical Chaney fare spiced with cannibalism and flavored with the Spanish Inquisition.”
The New York Evening Post observed that “Mr Chaney has been twisting joints and lacing himself into strait-jackets for a long time- so long, in fact that there is almost nothing left for him now but the Headless Horseman. The Evening Post called The Unknown ‘a remarkably unpleasant picture.{…} a visit to the dissecting room in a hospital would be quite as pleasant and at the same time more instructive.”
Flesh and Blood- Lon Chaney.
Richard Watts Jr of The New York Herald Tribune said of the film, “The case of Mr. Tod Browning is rapidly approaching the pathological. After a series of minor horrors that featured such comparatively respectable creations as murderous midgets, crippled thieves and poisonous reptiles, all sinister and deadly in a murky atmosphere of blackness and unholy doom… the director presents us now with a melodrama that might have been made from a scenario dashed off by the Messrs. Leopold and Loeb in a quiet moment”
Watts conceded that given cinema otherwise so completely devoted to red blooded values and ‘general aggressive cleanliness’ films of the sort Browning championed might provide a ‘valuable counteracting influence”Obviously he felt repulsed by The Unknown.
The conservative Harrison’s Reports wrote “One can imagine a moral pervert of the present day, or professional torturers of the times of the Spanish Inquisition that gloated over the miseries of their victims on the rack and over their roasting on hot iron bars enjoying screen details of the kind set forth in The Unknown. but it is difficult to fancy average men and women of a modern audience in this enlightened age being entertained by such a thoroughly fiendish mingling of bloodlust, cruelty and horrors. … Of Mr. Chaney’s acting it is enough to say it is excellent of it’s kind. Similar praise might well be given the work of a skilled surgeon in ripping open the abdomen of a patient. But who wants to see him do it?”
Both Tod Browning as a director and Lon Chaney as an actor occupy a unique space in early cinema where grotesque physicality becomes a potent metaphor for deeper human truths. Their films do not merely showcase eccentric or monstrous characters for shock value; rather, they probe the complex interplay of identity, desire, alienation, and the human condition’s darker recesses.
In The Unknown, Browning and Chaney invite us to confront a paradoxical vision of love and sacrifice—a vision that challenges conventional notions of heroism and romantic fulfillment. The physical mutilation (Alonzo’s self-amputation of his arms) is not merely a plot device but a corporeal symbol of profound psychological sacrifice and self-negation. It reflects a profound empathy for the fracture between human longing and the psychological, physical, and social barriers that exclude authentic connection.
Both Browning and Chaney, in all their work together and separately, are fascinated by “the other,” those who are physically marked, emotionally alienated, or psychologically fractured. Their characters embody the struggle of marginalized individuals who live on society’s edges yet possess rich, intense interior lives. The films illuminate how these outsiders grapple with pain, desire, and identity, often through literal bodily transformations or distortions.
Chaney’s mastery lies in translating inner turmoil into visceral, visible form, through prosthetics, makeup, and expressive physicality, to call it a psychological language. Browning’s direction reinforces this by presenting the body as both a site of narrative action and symbolic meaning. Amputation or deformity serves as an allegory for emotional wounds, fractured identity, and the incommunicability between individuals.
Their films portray love as volatile, consuming, and often self-destructive rather than pure or redemptive. In The Unknown, love becomes a force that demands abandonment of self and body, where sacrifice blurs into suffering, and devotion becomes madness. Browning and Chaney dissect the extremities of human emotion—the ways love can turn monstrous when entwined with fear, control, and forbidden desire.
The central conflict in The Unknown—Nanon’s phobia and Alonzo’s desperate self-mutilation—is an exploration of the limits and conditions of empathy. The film asks: How far will one go to bridge the gulf separating two tormented souls? What price does love demand when confronted with psychological barriers that cannot be easily overcome? Their films suggest that connection is fraught with ambiguity, pain, and sacrifice, sometimes demanding catastrophic gestures.
Rather than reading The Unknown and similar Browning-Chaney collaborations simply as stories of tragic physical impairment or melodramatic love, it is more compelling and accurate to see them as profound meditations on:
The intertwining of flesh and psyche, where the body’s alterations mirror emotional and existential fractures. The agonies of unfulfilled desire, where love is as much about yearning and loss as about possession or joy. The psychology of marginalization, portraying characters who are both monstrous and deeply human, forced to negotiate intense passions within alienating circumstances. The philosophy of sacrifice, not just physical but spiritual and psychological, revealing how identity is mutable and contingent upon the painful choices we make to survive or love.
In their collaborations, Tod Browning and Lon Chaney delve beyond mere spectacle or grotesque spectacle, crafting profoundly unsettling meditations on the human condition where the physical body becomes a vivid language of psychological and existential torment. The Unknown stands as a stark embodiment of this vision, where Chaney’s horrific self-amputation transcends literal mutilation to become a corporeal metaphor for the excruciating sacrifices demanded by love’s darker, often unbearable dimensions. This is not a simple narrative of loss or tragedy but a complex exploration of alienation, desire, and the fractured self.
Chaney’s Alonzo exists on the margins of society, a figure whose bodily disfigurement mirrors his tortured interior world, shaped by obsessive love for Nanon, whose phobia of touch erects near-impossible barriers to intimacy. In response, Alonzo’s radical act of self-mutilation is a desperate attempt to bridge the chasm between two haunted souls, a gesture that enacts the limits of empathy and the monstrous lengths to which love can drive a person. Here, the body is not simply a vessel but a battleground where identity warps and fractures in the torment of unfulfilled yearning and profound psychological strife.
Browning and Chaney do not romanticize this sacrifice—rather, they expose love’s capacity to consume, distort, and defy redemption. Their films reveal the paradox of “otherness”: the yearning for connection shadowed by alienation, the collision of fragile humanity with grotesque exteriority. The characters embody liminality, simultaneously monstrous and deeply human, caught in an agonizing dance where flesh and psyche entwine, and where sacrifice is both an act of devotion and a form of self-annihilation. In this world, love is not merely a source of comfort but an existential crucible, demanding anguish and disfigurement as payment for even the smallest glimmers of tenderness.
Ultimately, Browning and Chaney’s artistry compels us to confront love’s most unsettling demands—the violent, ambiguous, and often monstrous interplay of fear, desire, and identity. Through their lens, The Unknown transcends melodrama or physical spectacle to become a haunting, poetic inquiry into the human soul’s desperate quest for connection amid the shadows of alienation and loss. It is a work where beauty and horror coexist, the body speaks its own tragic language, and the pursuit of love unfolds as a fierce, transformative, and deeply precarious journey.
Joan Crawford eighteen at the time recalled Chaney’s ordeal with wearing the leather harness as agonizing a self punishing behavior. Mr Browning would say to him, “Lon, don’t you want me to untie your arms?” ‘No, the pain I am enduring now will help with the scene. Let’s go!” That’s how he was able to “convey such realism” and emotional agony that made it shocking and fascinating.“Chaney projected the image of physical suffering as both the definition and price of his stardom; exactly why he chose to is not so clear and since he left no revealing journals or correspondence on the matter, may forever remain obscure”Crawford said about Chaney, “When he acted, it was if God were working, he had such profound concentration. It was then I became aware for the first time of the difference between standing in front of a camera, and acting.”
“Armless Wonders” were among the most spectacular and well-paid performers in turn-of-the-century American freak shows who would perform tasks and feats (no pun intended) to entertain the onlookers.
Violetta, the limbless beauty.Frances Belle O’Connor was featured in Freaks.
While Freud had his pseudoscience fix for every mental ailment, Tod Browning favored themes of a visceral, sexually charged plot surrounding resentment and revenge. He screened overt manipulation of disturbing sexual symbolism in order to shock his audience into consciousness. The threat of castration is a particularly violent notion and a repressed emotional impulse. Freud’s Uncanny, the idea of disembodied limbs, severed heads, and hands cut off at the wrists, all have something particularly unsettling about them. Especially when they are shown as capable of independent movement, it all springs from the castration complex. Browning’s fascination with sexually motivated mutilation, like that of Cleopatra being turned into a chicken or ‘duck’ lady in Freaks, annihilating her beauty, that quality which she used to lure Hans.
Olga Baclanova as Cleopatra, the trapeze beauty turned into the Chicken Lady by the avenging Freaks.
In Freaks, Francis is an armless woman, and there are two armless girls- Martha Morris and Francis O’Connor. Richard Watts Jr, film critic for the New York Herald Tribune, said of Browning– “Browning is the combination of Edgar Allan Poe and Sax Rohmer of the cinema. Where every director, save Stroheim, breathes wholesomeness. Out-of-door freshness and the healthiness of the clean-limbed, Tod revels in murkiness… His cinematic mind is a creeping torture chamber, a place of darkness,deviousness, and death.”
After Freaks, “In Browning’s next project, the Freudian theory would be bizarrely literalized into a weird and spectacular circus attraction. Based on an original story by Browning. Alonzo the Armless was a vehicle for Lon Chaney that would prove to be one of the darkest carnivals of the entire Browning canon.”
Boxing Helena is a 1993 modern-day, grotesquely romantic melodrama that was directed by Jennifer Chambers Lynch (daughter of David Lynch). The film utilizes the mechanism of amputation as what I’ll call ‘seductive symbology’. Seductive symbology can animate art, literature, film, or even everyday rituals, stirring the imagination and luring the voyeur, the watcher, the witness, us, into deeper contemplation or desire. The film stars Julian Sands and Sherilyn Fenn as the object of his desire, a surgeon who will keep his love closest to him by any means.
David Lynch’s daughter astoundingly subverted my expectations of horror in Surveillance (2008), weaving an audacious blend of grotesque violence and eroticism that marks a remarkable departure from Boxing Helena—a film I met with unsettling, visceral angst. The haunting image of the little girl in pajamas wandering the desert in Surveillancestrikes me as a deliberate, evocative homage to the iconic scene in Them! (1954), underscoring Lynch’s gift for embedding subtle yet powerful nods within his chilling narrative. Her work pulses with genuinely dynamic moments of horror that defy easy categorization, though the film’s ingenious plot twists and mechanisms demand my discretion to preserve its impact should you want to see the film.
In considering contemporary explorations of eroticism intertwined with physical mutilation, Alejandro Jodorowsky’s Santa Sangre (1989) stands as a modern masterpiece. Once again, the Gothic embodiment unfolds within the eerie milieu of a traveling circus, where Concha’s violent amputation of both arms—inflicted by her volatile, sword-throwing, and philandering Neanderthal of a husband, portrayed by Guy Stockwell—becomes a potent symbol of psycho-sexual trauma. The merging of mythic imagery and raw sexual violence, fused with the motif of armless saints, conjures a nightmarish, baroque wonderland through the eyes of their son, Fenix, where horror and desire fuse into a singular, unsettling experience.
Guy Stockwell in Alejandro Jodorwosky’s Santa Sangre.The illusory masterpiece that is Santa Sangre.
The circus features an armless entertainer named Alonzo. He is a knife thrower who could split the hairs on two flies dancing in unison. His claim to fame is that he handles both bullets and blades with his bare feet. In the film’s opening scene, Alonzo performs, showing confidence in his perfect aim by flinging phallic knives at his beautiful assistant Nanon, who is at the receiving end of his knife throwing while seated on a rotating platform. With each delivery, he picks off one more article of Nanon’s clothing that dangles there, boasting of his sexual competence. Through this performance, Alonzo can sublimate his own feverish sexual urges for Nanon.
The secret lies in the fact that Alonzo actually does have two strong, capable arms, a fact that only his dwarf assistant Cojo (John George) is privy to. Each day, Cojo laces Alonzo into a punishing leather corset. Alonzo dons this apparatus to create the appearance of amputation. A disguise he perpetuates because he is on the run from the law, and it also brings him closer to the object of his fixation, the beautiful but sexually constrained Nanon. Nanon is consumed with a phobia surrounding the male anatomy, in particular their hands. She is repulsed by men’s upper extremities, “Men! The beasts! God would show wisdom if he took the hands from all of them!”
What frightens her more is the ‘ideal’ of Malabar’s physique. To Nanon, the object of Gothic horror seems to be the normative body, and strangely enough, not the body that is emphasized as different. Malabar’s body encompasses an extremely forceful ideal of the masculine body. Nanon is traumatized by Malabar’s aggressive touch and grasping hands. She finds him abhorrent.
She finds comfort in Alonzo, who poses no threat to her as he has no arms or hands that can either challenge her desire or harm her.
Although Alonzo possesses arms, he exhibits a freakish anomaly, as he has a double thumb on one hand. In the original story, Browning and screenwriter Waldemar Young had envisioned a claw as his deformity. However, the phallic charge of the double thumb is more in keeping with the influence that Freud’s The Uncanny had made on cinema. According to writer/historians Skal & Savada, ‘doubling’ is viewed by Freud as an imaginative defense against the feared loss of the self, or a part of the self.
Alonzo suffers in silence over his immortal love for Nanon, keeping their relationship strictly platonic, but he still attracts negative attention from Nanon’s father, the circus owner. On a dark and rainy night, Alonzo strangles the man, as Nanon peers outside her window yet does not see the killer’s face. The one thing that she does notice is the unmistakable double thumbs as it grips her father’s throat.
While Alonzo quietly broods over his unrequited love, the strong man Malabar (Norman Kerry) pursues her with all the traditional male prowess of a proud peacock. Of course, this sends Alonzo into fits of irrational jealousy. He blackmails a surgeon into actually removing his arms so that Nanon would assuredly run to him, being the safe male.
Malabar’s sexual advances only push Nanon closer to Alonzo’s friendship. But Alonzo’s sidekick Cojo ( John George, whom Browning used several times throughout his career) warns his friend that he shouldn’t let Nanon get so close as to be able to feel that he truly does have arms that are strapped down.
But when he returns to the circus after the surgery he discovers that Nanon has miraculously overcome her fear of manly chests, bulging muscles, and arms with which to hold her in ecstatic embrace. And the two are also engaged.
There is a sad, ironic scene when Nanon asks Alonzo if he is thinner before she tells him of her love for Malabar. The moment is filled with a typical Tod Browning sense of timely perversity, misdirection, and emotional pain.
She declares to her old friend that she even LOVES Malabar’s hands: “Remember how I used to be afraid of his hands? I am not anymore. I love them now.”
I’ll leave the climax to those who haven’t seen this violently intoxicating film yet.
The film is filled with cruelty, irony, and obsession. While the story is more like a wickedly grotesque fairytale, it observes a journey of its own, nightmarish reasoning, intricate as it is repulsive.
What is Nanon’s strange and horrible fixation on men’s hands? She is terrified by the thought of their hands on her!
“Alonzo, all my life, men have tried to put their beastly hands on me to paw over me.”
Malabar approaches Nanon.
She has “grown so that [she] shrink[s] with fear when any man touches [her]” with their “beastly hands.” Nanon’s fear becomes apparent when she is courted by the circus weight-lifter or strongman Malabar.
When Malabar boasts to Nanon of incredible strength, flexing his arm muscles and grabbing at her hands and her wrists while telling her of how his “hands that long to caress you,” Nanon struggles to get away, experiencing sheer terror.
The surgeon has no choice but to do Alonzo’s gruesome bidding.
Nanon tells Alonzo that he feels thinner.
Nanon’s father, Zanzi, the hard-edged circus owner, grows increasingly suspicious of Alonzo’s presence and motives, repelled by the peculiar intensity of his interest in Nanon. One charged evening, Zanzi’s suspicions crystallize and, by chance, he stumbles upon Alonzo in a compromising moment—witnessing not the spectacle of an armless performer but the shocking reality: Alonzo, unbound and very much in possession of arms, the infamous double thumb unmistakable. The truth arrives with the force of revelation and panic; in that instant, Zanzi realizes he stands face to face not with a broken sideshow oddity, but with a wanted man and a master of deception.
Cornered by exposure, Alonzo reacts with ruthless survival: propelled by fear, rage, and the desperate need to shield both his secret and his last hope for Nanon, he lunges forward and strangles Zanzi with his bare hands, silencing him forever outside the circus wagons. As fate would have it, Nanon glimpses the murder from her window, not the killer’s face, but the damning deformity: a double thumb pressed around her father’s throat, burned into her memory by a bolt of lightning. It is this fragment of a moment, violence half-seen, identity obscured, that sets the final tragedy of the film in motion, leaving Nanon haunted, the crime unsolved, and Alonzo bound even more tightly to a destiny of obsession and doom.
After Alonzo undergoes the gruesome amputation of his arms, driven by the catastrophic logic that this sacrifice will secure Nanon’s love and keep his murderous secret safe, he disappears for weeks to recover, leaving the circus and Nanon behind. In his absence, Malabar’s persistent care and genuine affection for Nanon help her overcome her lifelong fear of a man’s arms. By the time Alonzo, truly armless now, returns to the circus, he rushes to Nanon, uncertain but expectant. Instead of the reunion he imagined, he finds her radiant with newfound happiness; Nanon greets him with the euphoric news that she and Malabar are to be married.
Struck by the cruel irony of his sacrifice, Alonzo is at first hysterical with laughter, then collapses into inconsolable anguish as the reality sinks in: he has maimed himself for nothing. Nanon and Malabar are perplexed by the outburst, Nanon innocently mistaking his tears for happiness at their engagement.
Trying to compose himself, Alonzo discovers that Malabar and Nanon have devised a new circus act: Malabar is tied between two wild horses running on treadmills, each straining in opposite directions, a spectacle of strength and danger. Seized by jealousy and rage, Alonzo, still posing as a friend, secretly sabotages the act. —a horrific fate that mirrors Alonzo’s own self-inflicted mutilation.
During the tense performance, he stops one of the machines, threatening to have the wild horses pull Malabar’s arms from his body—a scene of climactic terror that reflects Alonzo’s own disfiguring obsession.
When Nanon tries to intervene and calm the frantic horses, Alonzo, desperate and unhinged, threatens her with a knife, but instinctively pushes her out of harm’s way at the last instant. In the ensuing chaos, one of the horses knocks Alonzo down. Fatally trampled, he dies as the act is halted, and Malabar is saved from disaster.
Thus, Alonzo’s journey, marked by secrecy, mutilation, and obsession, collapses in a flash of violence and futile longing—a finale as stark and haunting as anything silent cinema ever dared to show.
In this crucible of shadow and flesh, The Unknowninterrogates the paradox of love’s power to both wound and redeem. It demands an almost mythic reckoning with the body’s limits and the emotional scars they inscribe.
The Unknown (1927)-The Armless Wonder.
By MORDAUNT HALL.
Published: June 13, 1927
“Although it has strength and undoubtedly sustains the interest, “The Unknown,” the latest screen contribution from Tod Browning and Lon Chaney, is anything but a pleasant story. It is gruesome and at times shocking, and the principal character deteriorates from a more or less sympathetic individual to an arch-fiend. The narrative is a sort of mixture of Balzac and Guy de Maupassant with a faint suggestion of O. Henry plus Mr. Browning’s colorful side-show background.{…}
“The rôle of Alonzo, who poses as the Armless Wonder with a Spanish circus, is one that ought to have satisfied Mr. Chaney’s penchant for freakish characterizations, for here he not only has to go about for hours with his arms strapped to his body…{…}
“This tale is prefaced as if it were a circus legend, and soon one realizes that Alonzo is not only expert in the use of his feet when serving himself, but he is also supposed to be a crack shot and an unerring knife thrower. The girl who risks her life daily before Alonzo’s bullets and knives is Estrellita, impersonated by Joan Crawford. She becomes interested in Alonzo because most men in the circus without provocation invariably want to caress her.”
Metropolis 1927Earth vs the Flying Saucers 1956The Uninvited 1944Bedlam 1946The Mad Monster 1942Black Sunday 1960The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari 1920Tales from the Crypt 1972The Wolf Man 1941Night Monster 1942 Island of Lost Souls 1932Carnival of Souls 1962 Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man 1943 The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1939 London After Midnight 1927 Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein 1948West of Zanzibar 1928The Invisible Man1933Daleks’ Invasion Earth -2150 A.D. (1966) The Man from Planet X (1951) The Bride of Frankenstein 1935The Unknown 1927The Amityville Horror 1979The Man They Could Not Hang 1939Corridors of Blood 1958The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari 1920 The Ape Man 1943Chandu the Magician 1932The Time of Their Lives 1946 The Ghost of Frankenstein 1942The Invisible Man 1933The Raven 1935Dracula’s Daughter 1936 Bloody Mama 1970 Son of Frankenstein 1939 White Zombie 1932 The Cat and the Canary 1927 Dr. Renault’s Secret 1942 Black Sunday 1960Kill Baby Kill 1966 The Abominable Dr. Phibes 1971 Dracula 1931 Dragonwyck 1946 House of Wax 1953 The Raven 1963 Dracula’s Daughter 1936The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes 1939 the Bride of Frankenstein 1935 Beauty and the Beast 1946 The Incredible Shrinking Man 1957 Invasion of the Body Snatchers 1956 Tarantula 1955 Village of the Damned 1960 Cat and the Canary 1927
Silent Night, Bloody Night 1972Freaks 1932 West of ZanzibarHe Who Gets Slapped 1924 Family Plot 1976Â (rip Karen Black) Curse of the Demon 1957 Devil Girl From Mars 1954 Dr Cyclops 1940 Double Door 1934 Rosemary’s Baby 1968Pit and the Pendulum 1961 Experiment in Terror 1962 Eyes Without a Face 1960 Curse of the Demon 1957 The Giant Behemoth 1959 The Bride of Frankenstein 1935 The Ghost of Frankenstein 1942 The Haunted Palace 1963 Curse of the Demon 1957 He Who Gets Slapped 1924 Blackmail 1929 House on Haunted Hill 1959 House of Frankenstein 1944 The Haunting 1963 Night of the Living Dead 1968 Island of Lost Souls 1932MetroÌpolis 1927 It Came From Beneath the Sea 1955 The Crawling Eye 1958 It Came from Outer Space 1953 It Came from Outer Space 1953Lifeboat 1944 Man Made Monster 1941 The Monster 1925 Faust 1926 Curse of the Demon 1957 Night Monster 1942 The Day the Earth Stood Still 1951 The Thing from Another World 1951 The Devil Commands 1941 The Stepford Wives 1975The Screaming Skull 1958 the Bride of Frankenstein 1935 The Creature from the Black Lagoon 1954 The Black Cat 1934 The Black Cat 1934 The Fly 1958 The Ghost Ship 1943 The Invisible Ray 1936 The Leopard Man 1943 Freaks 1932The Man They Could Not Hang 1939 The Man They Could Not Hang 1939 The Mummy 1932 Psycho 1960 The Thing from Another World 1951 The Mummy’s’ Ghost 1944 The Undying Monster 1942 Jane Eyre 1943The Woman Who Came Back 1945 the Amazing Colossal Man 1957 The Incredible Shrinking Man 1957 The Seventh Seal 1957 The Haunting 1963 The Devil CommandsThe Thing From Another World 1951 The Undying Monster 1942 The Unholy 3 (1925) Vampyr 1932 I Walked with a Zombie 1943The Exorcist 1973 Carnival of Souls 1962White Zombie 1932 Island of Lost Souls 1932 Munster, Go Home! 1966
Special appreciation for several of the fabulous images courtesy of Dr. Macros High Quality photos!
HAVE A VERY SAFE & HAPPY HALLOWEEN FROM YOUR EVERLOVIN’ MONSTERGIRL!!!!!!
The incomparable Fritzi of Movies Silently and I are so THRILLED at the turn out so far for our Chaney shingdig in November. And we can’t wait to see it all come to life like Henry Frankenstein’s creation on that slab. Speaking for myself I’ve already shouted to the lightening permeated skies and bayed at the full moon with great ‘fangs’, I mean ‘thanks’… to everyone joining us!!!
But you know… there’s still films and television serials up for grabs, so don’t be shy, listen to the sound of my voice, you’re getting anxious, you’re getting excited, you’re ready to pick one of these fantastic unclaimed works by one or both of the great Chaneys!!!!
The makers of this post & The Last Drive In are not responsible for those of you susceptible to hypnosis -who find themselves walking into walls, or late nite raids on the refrigerator…. thank you- the staff at The Last Drive In (meaning me)
When do we swing from the bell tower, chandeliers and stalk by the full moon– November 15th – November 18
Have a question Leave a comment or contact either me ephemera.jo@gmail.com or Movies Silently
And say… don’t forget to grab one of the fabulous banners for the Chaney Blogathon in November!
Just look at these terrific unclaimed performances just waiting to be written about! There’s more at IMDb!
Act of Violence 1948 directed by Fred Zinnemann and starring Van Heflin, Robert Ryan and Janet LeighLon Chaney in Victor Hugo’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1923What Ever Happened To Baby Jane? 1962 Directed by Robert Aldrich and starring Bette Davis and Joan CrawfordBedlam 1946 directed by Mark Robson Produced by Val Lewton and starring Boris Karloff and Anna LeeBette Davis and Bette Davis in Dead Ringer (1964) directed by Paul Henreid and co-starring Karl Malden and Peter LawfordJoan Blondell and Tyrone Power in Nightmare Alley 1947 written by Jules Furthman for the screen and directed by Edmund GouldingCabin in the Sky 1943 directed by Vincente Minnelli and starring Lena Horne and Ethel WatersCrossfire 1947 directed by Edward Dmytryk starring the Roberts- Robert Young, Robert Mitchum and Robert RyanThe Day the Earth Stood Still 1951 directed by Robert Wise and starring Michael Rennie, Patricia Neal and Hugh MarloweThe Devil Commands 1941 directed by Edward Dmytryk and starring Boris Karloff and Anne Revere written for the screen by Robert Hardy AndrewsTHE OLD DARK HOUSE, THE (1932) GLORIA STUART and BORIS KARLOFF Dir: JAMES WHALEDr JEKYLL AND MR HYDE 1931starring Frederick March & Miriam Hopkins and directed by Rouben MamoulianThey Live By Night starring Farley Granger and Cathy O’Donnell. Directed by Nicholas RayJoan Fontaine and Judith Anderson in Alfred Hitchcock’s Rebecca 1940Phantom of the Opera 1925 starring Lon Chaney and Mary PhilbinTod Brownings Freaks 1932Gloria Grahame Odds Against Tomorrow 1959 directed by Robert Wise Josette Day in Cocteau’s Beauty and the Beast 1946Judith Anderson in Rebecca 1940Janet Leigh and Phyllis Thaxter in Act of Violence 1948Joseph L. Mankiewitz directs Louis Calhern & Marlon Brando in Julius Caesar 1953Fritz Langs’ Metropolis 1927William Castle’s Mr Sardonicus 1961 Starring Guy Rolfe and Audrey DaltonWilliam Wyler directs Shirley McClaine in Lillian Hellman’s The Children’s Hour 1961co-starring Audrey Hepburn and James GarnerMary Astor and Van Heflin Act of Violence 1948Odds Against Tomorrow Shelley Winters and Robert Ryan 1959Gregory Peck in Robert Mulligan’s To Kill a Mockingbird 1962 written by Harper Lee with a screenplay by Horton FooteRobert Ryan in Robert Wise’s The Set-Up 1949Sam Fuller’s The Naked Kiss 1964 starring Constance TowersCecil B DeMille’s Samson and Delilah 1949 -starring Hedy Lamarr and Victor MatureRobert Stevenson directed Bronte’s Jane Eyre 1943 starring a young Elizabeth Taylor and Peggy Ann GarnerThe Children’s Hour Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacLaineJulie Harris and Claire Bloom in Robert Wise’s The Haunting 1963George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead 1968Barbara Stanwyk as Jo in Walk on the Wild Side 1962 directed by Edward DmytrykWhat Ever Happened to Baby Jane? 1962 Bette Davis and Victor Buono
HAPPY FRIDAY THE 13th- Hope you have a truly lucky day-MonsterGirl
Beast from 20,000 Fathoms 1953Bela Lugosi and Irene Ware in Chandu the Magician 1932Fred Williamson in Black Caesar 1973Cat People 1942 Alice at the poolLon Chaney -He Who Gets Slapped 1924Claudette Colbert and Henry Wilcoxon in Cleopatra 1934The Sound of Fury aka Try and Get Me 1950Crime Wave 1954Dante’s Inferno (1911)Fallen Angel (1945) Dana Andrews, Alice Faye and Linda DarnellGun Crazy (1950) Peggy Cummins and John DallIn a Lonely Place (1950) Gloria GrahameAnn -Margret in Kitten With a Whip 1964Gene Tierney and Dana Andrews Laura (1944)The Innocents 1961 with Deborah KerrMary Astor The Maltese Falcon (1941)James Garner and Angela Lansbury -Mister Buddwing (1966)Out of the Past (1947) Robert Mitchum and Virginia HustonPlunder Road (1957) Elisha Cook Jr.Kim Stanley and Richard Attenborough Seance on a Wet Afternoon 1964Svengali (1931) John Barrymore and Marian MarshThe Blue Dahlia (1946) Alan Ladd and Veronica LakeAelita: Queen of Mars (1924)
Lon Chaney Sr. (Leonidas Chaney) April 1 1883- August 26 1930
The Film Score Freak wants to pay tribute to The Man of a Thousand Faces, the inimitable Lon Chaney Sr. who’s evocative style of physical performance, volatile and poignant, effusive, penetrating and always sublime characterizations created some of the most memorable roles in cinematic history.
Happy Birthday Lon Chaney, we here at The Last Drive In wish you never get slapped, never to be unknown, never to be in the shadows or swing from a bell unless you’re ringing it for joy, to keep your wonderful face unmasked and the music playing til the ends of time, no matter how many thumbs or arms or legs you have, or whatever unholy mischief you might be up to, we adore you forever from here to Zanzibar….
My song ‘Passing/Arriving’ appears on my lo-fi album The Amber Session, you can visit my official site at EphemeraÂ
as Paul Beamont or HE in He Who Gets Slapped 1924as Tito in Laugh, Clown, Laugh (1928) with Loretta Young Alonzo in The Unknown 1927 with Joan CrawfordLon Chaney as The Phantom of the Opera 1925Lon Chaney as Chinese Immigrant Yen Sin in Shadows (1922)as Professor Edward C. Burke in London After Midnight 1927as Quasimodo in The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1923Chaney in and out of his costume as The Frog for The Miracle Man 1919as Blizzard in The Penalty 1920 with Ethel Terryas Wilse Dilling in The Shock 1923Echo – The Ventriloquist in The Unholy Three 1930Phroso in West of Zanzibar 1928Alfonso in The Unknown with Joan Crawford
Happy Birthday Lon Chaney-With love to a man of many monsters from a MonsterGirl