
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923)
1h 53m | PG-13
In 15th century France, a gypsy girl is framed for murder by the infatuated Chief Justice, and only the deformed bellringer of Notre Dame Cathedral can save her.
Director: Wallace Worsley
Studio: Universal Pictures
Genre: Romance, Drama, Horror
Video: 720p
Cast

Lon Chaney
as Quasimodo

Patsy Ruth Miller
as Esmeralda

Norman Kerry
as Phoebus de Chateaupers

Kate Lester
as Madame de Condelaurier

Winifred Bryson
as Fleur de Lys

Nigel De Brulier
as Don Claudio
Reviews
I reckon that this has to be the saddest of all love stories ever written - in any language! Although top billing goes to the pathetically grotesque Lon Chaney as the bell-ringer "Quasimodo", I think the plaudits must go to Patsy Ruth Miller as the persecuted gypsy "Esmerelda" in this 1923 adaptation of Victor Hugo's story. The score is hauntingly effective as both battle prejudice, jealousy and enmity from high and low society; with plots for revolution against the rather despotic rule of Louis XI never far from the theme. Chaney's make up is not great, even by the standards of the day, and it would not look out of place in a "Tarzan" film, but that matters little to the wonderfully evocative efforts from director Wallace Worsley to enshrine this classical story of lust, power and sadness to film, with a narrative that emphasises more of the emotional aspects of the story than many of it's successors. Particularly effective is the use of light and staging (partly Parisian, partly Californian) too. 2¼ hours may look long, but this positively flies by - rarely, if ever, making you want it to hurry up. Great stuff.