Although
rock solid supporting player Claude Rains is certainly best remembered today as
the mercurial Louis in CASABLANCA (1942), the English actor also made huge
contributions to the genre of horror, and Turner Classic Movies will put the
spotlight on that aspect of Rains’ career with its primetime lineup for SUMMER
UNDER THE STARS on Sunday, August 5.
THE
INVISIBLE MAN (1933), a wickedly funny James Whale classic that proved a
breakthrough role for Rains, takes center stage with the 8 p.m. Eastern time slot,
but just before it at 6:45 p.m. is THE WOLF MAN (1941), the original Universal
picture starring Lon Chaney, Jr. as the moon-cursed protagonist and Rains as
his skeptical father. Directed by George Waggner, THE WOLF MAN is one of my
all-time favorite movies, not because it’s particularly scary but because the
performances of Rains, Chaney, and their costars pitch the story as a deeply
affecting domestic tragedy, in which Rain’s Sir John Talbot pays a terrible
price for his failures as a father.
Rains
brings wonderful gravitas to his role, and he lets us see very early on that
Sir John has done a great deal of damage to his relationship with his son, not
through outward cruelty, but through the insidious effects of favoritism and
indifference. Larry’s older brother was the heir to the family estate, and Sir
John pinned all of his hopes and his love on his firstborn son, leaving so
little for Larry that the younger son fled to a new life in America. Now, in
the wake of the heir’s death, Larry returns to England but seems fated to fail
in taking his brother’s place. Rains keeps his distance as Sir John, never
really embracing his only surviving child but still subtly dependent on him in
a way that neither expected.
In
the context of the story, Larry never does anything wrong to deserve his awful
fate. In fact, he is bitten by the werewolf (Bela Lugosi) while trying to save
a young woman from being killed by the monster. Sir John, however, has earned
the wrath of the heavens by first neglecting his younger son and then expecting
him to give up his own desires to replace the dead heir. Like King Lear, Sir
John fails as a father to his younger child and is therefore punished by the
loss of all of his children. A bad father becomes no father at all. The film’s
most eloquent and tragic piece of poetic justice comes in the final scene, when
it is Sir John himself who brings his fate to bear.
It
takes an actor of Claude Rains’ caliber to carry off such an important role.
Sir John must be sympathetic enough that we understand why Larry yearns for his
approval, but he must be flawed enough that we recognize the ending as right in
some way, no matter how terrible it is for our protagonist. The expression on
Rains’ face in the final scene of this film is one of the most heartbreaking
things you will ever see. With the silver cane in his hand and his dead child
at his feet, Sir John knows, too late, how much he has lost in the son he
failed to love before.
TCM
will air plenty of other great Rains performances on Sunday, August 5. Among my
other favorites on the schedule are NOW, VOYAGER (1924) and THE ADVENTURES OFROBIN HOOD (1938). Rains also plays a very different father in MR. SKEFFINGTON
(1944), which features one of the most sob-inducing father-daughter moments
ever seen on film.
This post is part of the TCM Summer Under the Stars Blogathon hosted by classic movie bloggers at Sittin' On a Backyard Fence and ScribeHard on Film. Check out their sites for links to all of the blog posts celebrating every star of the day on TCM in August!
No doubt that Rains is the star of THE WOLF MAN. But Chaney Jr. does a great job with the character of Larry Talbot. Unlike his Mis-cast role of Dracula in SON OF DRACULA (1943), Talbot is a perfect match for Chaney's slightly dopey line delivery and lumbering physicality.
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