|
The
Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939)
In RKO's and director William Dieterle's classic adaptation
of the 1831 Victor Hugo novel about the hunchbacked Notre Dame Cathedral
bell-ringer and his love for a gypsy girl in 15th century France:
- during the Fool's Day annual celebration in medieval
Paris, as part of the proceedings, a King of Fools was to be selected;
Louis XI (Harry Davenport), the King of France noted: "The
ugly is very appealing to man... it's instinct. One shrinks from
the ugly, yet wants to look at it. There's a devilish fascination
in it. We extract pleasure from horror"
- in the opening sequence, pretty gypsy girl Esmeralda
(Maureen O'Hara in her film debut) danced before an appreciative
audience, even though gypsies were persecuted and considered outcasts
(and prohibited from entering Paris); she was thrown a coin by the
King who remarked: "Who cares about her race? She's pretty!";
as she danced, one eye peered out to secretly watch her and she shrunk
back in horror: "That eye, staring at me," as various onlookers
commented: "It's an animal. It's a fiend"
- it was the first
hideous view of deafened Quasimodo (Charles Laughton), the hunchback
bellringer of Notre Dame - only part of his deformed face was visible;
he was seized and led to the stage by a throng of people and offered
to be crowned and proclaimed the new King of Fools
- in an extremely touching scene, the radiantly-beautiful
gypsy girl Esmeralda mercifully offered a drink of water to the deformed
hunchback bellringer Quasimodo after a public scourging during his
one hour on the pillory
|
|
Holding Her Aloft: "Sanctuary, Sanctuary"
|
Quasimodo's Daring Rescue of Esmeralda
|
- Esmeralda was sentenced - framed
and falsely accused of witchcraft ("bewitched") and murder
(of her soldier-lover Captain Phoebus (Alan Marshal)) by the sexually-repressed
and jealousy-crazed Chief Justice Jean Frollo (Cedric Hardwicke),
Quasimodo’s adoptive father figure - she was taken to be
hanged on a wooden scaffold within view of the Notre Dame Cathedral
- the sequence was topped by Quasimodo's thrilling
and daring rescue of the gypsy girl by swinging to her on a rope,
seizing her, and taking her up to the towering structure, and crying
as he held her above his head: "Sanctuary, Sanctuary"
- during a vengeful scene in the ND belltower, when
Quasimodo confronted Frollo seeking to harm Esmeralda with a dagger,
Quasimodo struggled against Frollo, then grabbed him and threw
him off the top of the cathedral
Esmeralda's Love for Captain Phoebus
|
Frollo's Jealous Lust for Esmeralda
|
Quasimodo Confronting Frollo and Heaving Him Off
Top of Cathedral
|
- in the bittersweet ending after Esmeralda (and her
gypsy people) were pardoned, Quasimodo delivered a heartbreaking
closing line next to a gargoyle high atop Notre Dame: "Why
was I not made of stone like thee?"
"Why was I not made of stone like thee?"
|
Zoom Back From Cathedral
|
- the film concluded with a tremendous zoom back
of the camera from the cathedral with choruses of 'Hallelujah'
to end the film
|
(l and r): King Louis XI (Harry Davenport), and Chief
Justice Frollo (Cedric Hardwicke)
Esmeralda - Dancing Gypsy Girl (Maureen O'Hara)
First Partial View of Bellringer Quasimodo
The Hunchback - Proclaimed the King of Fools
Quasimodo Offered a Drink by Esmeralda
Condemned to be Hanged in Front of the Cathedral
|