Enjoyable dark silent film about a magician (Lon Chaney) who, when he finds out
that his wife is running off with Lionel Barrymore, gets in a fight with him and
ends up paralyzed from the legs down. Later on he hears that his wife has
returned with a baby girl. Chaney rushes to go see his wife, but she's
dead. So in an act of revenge he takes the baby and believing that it's
Barrymore's child, has her raised in the "lowest dive in Zanzibar" while he
himself has tracked down Barrymore who is now an ivory trader. Chaney uses
his magician skills to trick the local tribesmen and with their help he's been
stealing ivory from Barrymore's men. As planned this enrages
Barrymore. Chaney then reveals that he's behind the thefts and sets up a
meeting to enact his final revenge.
For being made in 1928, WEST OF ZANZIBAR is pretty grim, especially the
revenge on the child aspect. When it was first mentioned I almost thought
it was gonna go an OLDBOY way, but it ended up going the MANON OF THE SPRING
direction instead. If you are interested in silent cinema then you should
definitely check it out. It's not the greatest silent ever (or even in the
Top 100), the pace is kinda slow and even though the mood is dark (and this was
Pre-Code), really nothing too unacceptable happens onscreen, but it's
still an enjoyable film and watching Chaney's sneering while he's dragging his
legs around the joint is worth the price of admission alone. The biggest
problem I had with the film was believing that Lionel Barrymore could be
evil. He's made such a powerful impression in my handsome brain with his
performances in films like
GRAND HOTEL
and
YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU
that it's really difficult to take him seriously as the bad guy.