The Last Performance (1929) Poster

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7/10
Veidt was Made for the Silents
LanceBrave23 November 2013
Universal was enamored of setting stories in the theater, weren't they? Perhaps "Phantom of the Opera" set the precedence. "The Last Warning" featured a masked murderer terrorizing Broadway. "The Last Performance" sets a love triangle among a magic act. Once again, Mary Philbin plays the object of desire of a murderous older man. While "Phantom" had obvious grotesque attributes and "The Last Warning" was basically an old dark house mystery, "The Last Performance" is a melodrama with light fantastic elements.

The story is typical. Erik the Great, a stage magician and hypnotist, is in love with Julie, his female assistant. He plans to marry the girl as soon as she turns eighteen, a story turn likely to gross out modern audiences. Julie only has eyes for Mark, a vagabond that Erik takes under his wing. "The Last Performance" neatly follows the three-act structure, with Erik discovering the truth about his love at the 18 minute point, the "seven swords through the box" magic trick going predictably wrong half-way through, and the last act set during a trial, with the case-solving testimony serving as a concise climax.

Of most interest to horror fans is Conrad Veidt's performance. Veidt was made for the silents. He says so much with simply a shift of his brow, expressing heart-break or jealousy with only his face. Despite the temptation to compare the two, Erik the Great isn't Erik the Phantom. He's not a monster, rather a fair man who commits wrong only out of love. The hypnotism sequences make great use of his glaring eyes. No wonder Veidt was nearly Dracula. Conrad's performance alone makes the sappy finale believable. The rest of the cast is thin, with Mary Philbin making goo-goo eyes at Fred MacKaye, a marginal matinée hero.

While lighter on expressionistic atmosphere then you'd hope, "The Last Performance" still has several stand-out moments. An early bit has Veidt walking a catwalk, shadows criss-crossing over his face. When the lover's affair is revealed, his shadow is cast huge on the wall, dwarfing the girl and her mate. Veidt's power as a hypnotist is displayed by overlaying his glaring face over the character performing the requested action. A memorable early scene has the man mesmerizing a skeptical audience member, their theater booth suddenly spinning around them.

"The Last Performance" is another example of routine silent film material elevated by its lead actor. After years of obscurity, the film was recently released by the Criterion Collection… Kind of. It's a special feature packaged with "Lonesome," a later film by the same director. This version has Danish titles with English subtitles and is apparently missing several sound sequences. The film is concise enough that I can't imagine those scenes would add much.
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7/10
Another Fine Performance By Conrad Veidt
boblipton14 October 2020
Conrad Veidt is a stage magician with two assistants. One is Leslie Fenton. The other is Mary Philbin, with whom Veidt is in love. One evening, Fred MacKaye breaks into Veidt's hotel room and is caught.... hungrily eating Veidt's dinner. Veidt takes him on as a third assistant. Then he catches MacKaye and Miss Philbin canoodling; he olympically wishes them well, but one evening, doing the trick where Fenton is placed in a trunk and MacKaye shoves swords into the trunk, something goes wrong, and Fenton is discovered in the trunk, stabbed to death. MacKaye is arrested.

Veidt offers one of his great performances; the blacking he wears around his eyes to make him look devilish makes me wonder how he would have been playing Dracula in Tod Browning's version of the movie. In many ways, this looks likes a variation on the sort of formulaic movie that Lon Chaney was starring in at MGM at the moment... although Veidt's performance never asks for our sympathy. He simply dominates everyone.
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6/10
Opulent but shrill melodrama
st-shot4 November 2020
Famed magician, hypnotist Erik the Great (Conrad Veidt) has a Svengali issue with his comely underage assistant Julie (Mary Philbin). Awaiting the day for her to turn 18 he stage manages an over the top dinner party to announce their engagement. Unfortunately due to his charitable ways he takes on a second story man as an assistant who Julie falls for much to the delight of Erik's other bitter assistant.

A last gasp (1929) silent featuring some outstanding set design, tracking shots and the magnetic mugs of Veidt and Philbin, The Last Performance allows itself little time to build (barely an hour) with the young lovers clicking in no time with little development. The incredibly graceful and intimidating Veidt with his hands and eyes is always a fascinating watch especially when he has to do a painful 180 at the engagement soiree. The bottom falls out in the second half though with a revenge plot playing out tediously and a Perry Mason like finale for the ages. The Last Performance is a poor one.
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Conrad the Great
hamilton6511 December 2001
Often termed a horror film (due to it's background of stage magic) this is really a tale of thwarted love. Conrad Veidt excels as the kindly Erik the Great who finds his soon to be bride has fallen in love with one of his assistants. The discovery scene is a superb piece of acting from Veidt, as he shifts from shock to heartbreak, struggling to be magnanimous, and then gradually to cold calculation with the subtlest changes of expression.

These moments and a dynamic trial scene elevate what is otherwise an okay backstage melodrama into a truly compelling tale of jealousy and redemption. Palo Fejos, director of the wonderful "Lonesome", injects some stylish visuals.

The version I've seen is a truncated and mute print of 48 minutes, so I may have missed some of the film's finer points.
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8/10
Confident Watch for Conrad Veidt
gengar8435 November 2021
THE STORY & GENRE -- Stage magician Conrad Veidt in standard love-triangle revenge tale. This gets quite grisly in the courtroom scene! And he really has hypnotic powers (briefly early), so this counts 100%.

THE VERDICT -- The evocative Veidt elevates this from mere pathos, which culminates in revenge, to the highest level of silent art (the sound version is apparently lost). The close camera-work is in his favor as every nuance of his expression sting the viewer.

FREE ONLINE -- I believe all that's available is a silent Danish print with English subtitles.
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