Directed by: Wallace Worsley
Starring:
![]() Lon Chaney in The Penalty. |
His stunning physical performance as the double amputee in The Penalty put Lon Chaney on the map in Hollywood. For the role he harnessed his legs inside incredibly painful leather stumps and moved about on his knees using crutches. It is painful to watch but incredibly effective. The costume was completed using a long coat that hides his legs in the back. The searing discomfort Chaney endured surely added to his electrifying portrayal of the deranged criminal mastermind Blizzard. If the Academy Awards had been around in 1920 I’ve no doubt Chaney would have won for this role.
The story begins with Chaney’s character as a young boy. He gets his legs needlessly amputated by a young doctor. Years later the boy has become Blizzard, the ruthless leader of the San Francisco underworld. He’s a comic book villain before they existed. Not only does he have an elaborate plan to extort the city and put it under his control, but he’s also bent on revenge against the doctor that disfigured him (now a renowned surgeon).
When the opportunity arises for Blizzard to pose for the doctor’s unsuspecting daughter, he takes it with relish. She’s an aspiring artist who dreams of sculpting the likeness of Satan. What better model than the sinister Blizzard? Will his nefarious plans against both the man that ruined his life and the city he calls home be successful?
The direction by Wallace Worsley is quite good. He tells the story from several different perspectives, cutting from scenes of the police planning Blizzard’s downfall to scenes of Blizzard at his lair. The Penalty has a gritty look and is swiftly paced for a silent movie.
Blizzard likes to play the piano and uses his latest female plaything to work the foot petals while he tickles the ivories. It’s quite sexually suggestive the way the women kneel on the floor in front of him while he gloats, confident of his all-consuming power over them. One woman even calls him “master” before he takes her in his arms and kisses her. Although technically silent movies aren’t referred to as Pre-Code, The Penalty would definitely have been edited for content after 1934.
The bindings on Chaney’s legs were so tight they constricted his circulation. He could only wear them for about 10 minutes at a time and they caused permanent damage to his leg muscles. Although Lon Chaney would go on to greater fame as The Hunchback of Notre Dame and The Phantom of the Opera, his role as Blizzard is, in some ways, the Man of a Thousand Faces’ most impressive work.
My only problem with the movie is the ending, which feels too pat and convenient. I won’t give it away but it wasn’t what I expected. It is also unbelievably fantastic (not in the good sense of the word) and lowers the overall impact of the story. The Penalty is still definitely worth watching for Chaney’s incredible performance alone. Although he is remembered today mostly for his work in Phantom, Lon Chaney was THE seminal actor of the American horror genre and he appeared in more than 150 movies. He made only one talkie however, The Unholy Three, before his untimely death from lung cancer at the age of 47 in 1930.
Photos © Copyright Goldwyn Pictures Corporation (1920)