Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 5000000
Revenue
$ 26000000

Frederick Treves

John Merrick

Mrs Kendal

Carr Gomm

Mothershead

Bytes

Night Porter

Mrs Treves

Princess Alex

Fox

Bytes' Boy

Nora

Merrick's Mother

Fairground Bobby

Fat Lady

Skeleton Man

Distraught Woman

Alderman

Fire Eater

Hodges

Pierce

Messenger

Cabman

Cook

Nurse Kathleen

Young Porter

Milkman

1st Fighting Woman

2nd Fighting Woman

Tart

Broadneck

1st Committee Man

Mrs Kendal's Dresser

Man in Pub

Lady Waddington

Lord Waddington

Man With Whores

1st Whore

2nd Whore

Plumed Dwarf

Giant

Midget

Midget

Siamese Twin

Siamese Twin

Japanese Bleeder

Little Jim

Screaming Mum

First Bobby

Second Bobby

King In Panto

Puss In Panto

Princess In Panto

Principal Boy

Tree

Tree

Lion / Coachman

Fairy

Horse

Horse

Horse

Horse

Merrick's Mother

Man in the Bowler Hat in the Mob Chasing Merrick (uncredited)

Policeman (uncredited)

Man at Lecture (uncredited)

Young Aristocrat (uncredited)

Injured Man (uncredited)

Kid at Train Station (uncredited)

Thug from Pub (uncredited)

Man in crowd (uncredited)

Man in Pub (uncredited)

Committee Member (uncredited)

Lyra Box Player #1 (uncredited)

Lyra Box Player #2 (uncredited)

Man at Lecture (uncredited)

Man at Lecture (uncredited)

Kid at Train Station #2 (uncredited)

Courtier (uncredited)

Committee Member (uncredited)

Lecture Assistant (uncredited)

Nurse (uncredited)

Doctor (uncredited)

Written by Wuchak on 2020-07-02
_**The ultimate outcast**_ In 1884 London, a doctor (Anthony Hopkins) meets Joseph Merrick, aka The Elephant Man (wrongly called John Merrick in the film) who was being exploited as a freak show attraction. Treves (Hopkins) tries to help Merrick (John Hurt) for the last six years of the latter’s life wherein he becomes cultured, but he inevitably remains an object of curiosity, to high society as well as low society. Anne Bancroft plays a winsome entertainer who is warm toward Merrick. Directed by David Lynch and shot in B&W, “The Elephant Man” (1980) is a melancholic biographical movie, and understandably so, but Merrick’s story is worth checking out despite the fact that it inspires pity. It calls into question the concept of beauty: Natural beauty is something one is born with and did nothing to acquire, but so is physical unattractiveness. Then there’s inner beauty. The charismatic actress (Bancroft) displays both. Of course there’s also inner ugliness, like the carnival huckster. A myth developed about Merrick’s disfigurement that his mother was raped by an elephant, probably started by sideshow hawkers. The opening conveys this in an artistic manner, but it’s not to be taken literally, which is why it’s surreal. Meanwhile the factory scenes with the pipes and corresponding dangers exhibit the reality for workers in Victorian times. The score by John Morris is noteworthy with one piece being ripped-off for the moving parts of “Platoon” (1986), e.g. Elias’ melodramatic death scene. The film runs 2 hours, 4 minutes, and was shot entirely in London and nearby Shepperton Studios, just west of the city. GRADE: B

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2023-06-07
Saw this, recently up-converted to 4K at the London Film Festival and, apart from the clear improvements to the quality and detail of the image, I was reminded of just how good it is. Anthony Hopkins and Anne Bancroft play their roles with engaging sincerity - very ably supported by Sir John Gielgud and Dame Wendy Hiller. Prosthetics aside, John Hurt captures both the despair and optimism of Merrick with empathetic style; and Freddie Jones is just downright evil as "Bytes". His son Toby was at the screening and I couldn't help but wonder when he watched this portrayal by his father whether the pride in the performance must have been tempered by a disgust in the character, itself!! This film doesn't seem to do the rounds very often, nowadays, but it holds up very well after almost 40 years and is really a gem.