Freaks / The Unknown / The Mystic: Tod Browning'S Sideshow Shockers Blu-Ray

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DVD $32.39
Collection: Criterion Collection
Format: Blu-ray
Year: 1925–1932
Director: Tod Browning
Genre: Horror
Cast: Lon Chaney, Joan Crawford, Aileen Pringle, Wallace Ford, Olga Baclanova, Johnny Eck
Runtime: 204
Language: English
Release Date: 2023-10-17

The world is a carnival of criminality, corruption, and psychosexual strangeness in the twisted pre-Code shockers of Tod Browning. Early Hollywood’s edgiest auteur, Browning drew on his experiences as a circus performer to create subversive pulp entertainments set amid the world of traveling sideshows, which, with their air of the exotic and the disreputable, provided a pungent backdrop for his sordid tales of outcasts, cons, villains, and vagabonds. Bringing together two of his defining works (The Unknown and Freaks) and a long-unavailable rarity (The Mystic), this cabinet of curiosities reveals a master of the morbid whose ability to unsettle is matched only by his daring compassion for society’s most downtrodden.

TWO-BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES
• New 2K digital restoration of Freaks, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
• New 2K digital reconstruction and restoration of The Unknown by the George Eastman Museum, with a new score by composer Philip Carli
• New 2K digital restoration of The Mystic, with a new score by composer Dean Hurley
• Audio commentaries on Freaks and The Unknown and an introduction to The Mystic by film scholar David J. Skal
• New interview with author Megan Abbott about director Tod Browning and pre-Code horror
• Archival documentary on Freaks
• Episode from 2019 of critic Kristen Lopez’s podcast Ticklish Business about disability representation in Freaks
• Reading by Skal of “Spurs,” the short story by Tod Robbins on which Freaks is based
• Prologue to Freaks, which was added to the film in 1947
• Program on the alternate endings to Freaks
• Video gallery of portraits from Freaks
• English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
• PLUS: An essay by film critic Farran Smith Nehme