The Man Without Desire

The Man Without Desire is a 1923 British silent film fantasy drama, directed by Adrian Brunel and starring Ivor Novello, who also co-produced the film along with Miles Mander. The film was Brunel's feature-length directorial debut and has been described as "one of the stranger films to emerge from Britain in the 1920s".[1] The film's theme of loss of sexual desire, and by implication impotence, was exceptionally frank for its time; oddly, however, it appears to have been passed for release without interference by the British film censors, who at this time had a reputation for extreme zealousness where sexual matters in film were concerned.

The Man Without Desire
Ivor Novello screenshot
Directed byAdrian Brunel
Written byAdrian Brunel
Monckton Hoffe
Frank Powell
Produced byIvor Novello
Miles Mander
StarringIvor Novello
Nina Vanna
CinematographyHenry Harris
Production
company
Atlas Biocraft
Distributed byAtlas Biocraft
Release date
  • 1923 (1923)
Running time
7000 feet
CountryUnited Kingdom

Production

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Brunel's commission for the film was to write and produce a historical drama set in Venice. Feeling that this alone would not necessarily prove a draw for filmgoers, he came up with a story which had an 18th-century core but was framed by a contemporary narrative. The film was given a budget of £5,000, which, while not lavish, allowed for travel to Venice to shoot location scenes. Studio filming and post-production took place in Berlin, and film historians observe the influence on the finished product of the German expressionist cinema of the era, notably the celebrated The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.[1]

Plot

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Vanna and Novello in a publicity shot for the film

18th-century Venetian Count Vittorio Dandolo (Novello) is devastated by the death of his lover Leonora (Nina Vanna) and loses all interest in life. Wishing to escape from his grief, he devises a method of putting himself in a state of suspended animation. He awakens 200 years later in 1920s Venice where he meets Genevia, Leonora's double, who turns out to be a descendant of his former love. Falling immediately in love with Genevia, he proposes marriage which Genevia accepts. He then discovers that his 200-year slumber has left him with the ability to love but unable to experience passion, and the marriage remains unconsummated.[2]

Cast

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  • Ivor Novello as Count Vittorio Dandolo
  • Nina Vanna as Leonora / Genevia
  • Sergio Mari as Almoro / Gordi
  • Christopher Walker as Roger / Mawdesley
  • Jane Dryden as Luigia
  • Dorothy Warren as Foscolina

References

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  1. ^ a b The Man Without Desire (1923) Duguid, Mark. BFI Screen Online. Retrieved 24 August 2010
  2. ^ Review of The Man Without Desire: 'Screen Values', Motion Picture Studio, 22 December 1923, page 5.
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