6/10
No clever transformation in this early version
8 August 2019
The 1920 version has John Barrymore transforming and twisting himself before your eyes, Lon Chaney style. The 1931 version had an on-screen transformation using a technique that turned out to be simple yet brilliant, and director Rouben Mamoulian kept the secret until his deathbed. But such secrecy would not be needed here, because Jekyll merely drinks the potion grabs his throat and poof! The film jumps and the same actor has now transformed into Hyde complete with makeup and different colored hair. Apparently in this version blonde = good Dr. Jekyll, brunette = evil Hyde.

There are intertitles that tell you what is going on, but even though you can see the actors speaking to one another there are no dialogue intertitles.

There is no "woman of the street" that Hyde is molesting in this version. And although he does cane somebody to death, the only other evil thing that he is shown doing is knocking down a toddler on the sidewalk! Oh, and Dr. Jekyll does not name his evil self Hyde. From the intertitles we are told that this is what the people of the village have dubbed Jekyll's evil self.

The title role is played by James Cruze, early silent actor and later a director into the talking picture era. He was later married to Betty Compson, the hardest working actress of the early talking era. But here one of the extras is Marguerite Snow, his first wife and mother of his only child.
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