There was an actor with one of the strangest faces I have ever seen in my life. His name is Daniel Emilfork, and acted in a number of French cult films. The shape of his skull is very narrow; he has nearly no chin to speak of; and the distance between his nose and his mouth is remarkably long.
What, genetically, causes such an appearance? Or is it something non-genetic, such as malnutrition during fetal development?
Well, I am no expert, but I have to disagree with your assessment of his face. There is no one of his facial features that is outside the range of normal, although his nose looks rather large (based on the photos). He does have a receding chin, but lots of people have that. He has along upper lip, but again not outside the range of normal. The second photo on the top row shows his face’s basic normality.
I think he purposely exaggerated his face’s potential for grotesquerie to get acting work.
Roddy
He looks slightly like Rondo Hatton, who had acromegaly, but I daresay if had a full head of hair and a pair of glasses, he’d be ugly but not otherwise remarkable.
His face resembles those of many people I have seen with primordial dwarfism. But obviously he is not a dwarf, doesn’t appear to have any health conditions whatsoever. He looked much more normal as a young man, too. With age his face got gaunt and his nose grew larger, made him much more funny-looking.
I think the only truly unusual thing about his face is that his lower jaw is very underdeveloped, which makes an odd contrast with his large beaky nose. Receding chins can just happen, for a variety of reasons (genetics, nutrition, TMJ).
Even that picture of him as a young man - which is so bizarre and posed as to offer very little clear analysis of his facial structure - you can see his strangely sunken cheeks. His face reminds me of children with progeria, actually.
His nose is what strikes me the most. The top of it is at the brow ridge rather than at eye level, it’s unusally wide at the top, the bridge is prominent, and the tip angles down (the opposite of an upturned nose), all of which together give it a rather odd appearance. The rest of his features – narrow face, weak chin, thick lower lip, splayed teeth, protruding ears – all seem to be within the normal range of such things, but the combination of all of this on one face does seem unusual.
Here’s morepictures ofa younger Emilfork - he’s a little funny looking, but not nearly so much as when he’s elderly. In fact it rather looks as though he’s wearing poorly-fitting false teeth in his later films.
Bumping this thread, because I discovered another actor with - while not exactly the same - a similar face structure. Richard Belzer. It’s not as evident because he has a lot of hair on his head though.
They’ve both got too much distance between their earlobes and the point of their chins. Kim Jong Il had the opposite problem. The explanation is not that they are some variant of human genetics, but rather that they are different species entirely. It is argued in some circles that they do not even hail from this galaxy.
This is what comes of watching too much TV: normal people who aren’t TV-pretty seem “abnormal”. Also he’s thin, which is rapidly becoming “abnormal” too.
When I saw the first picture, I thought it was the guy who plays Death on Supernatural: Julian Richings. Both men’s faces just seem quirky to me, not deformed or “abnormal” in any significant way.
In a lot of the pictures linked by the OP he appears to be intentionally distorting his features. He squints or bulges his eyes, and distorts his mouth in a variety of ways. When he isn’t doing that, he just has a long-ish face and bald head. As a character actor he may be used to exagerrating his features and is publicly recognized that way.
I don’t agree at all - as I said, in another thread, two months ago:
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I also disagree with the premise of “Hollywood ugly” and that the “average person on the street” is substantially less attractive than movie/TV stars. No. Attractive facial features are actually surprisingly common, if you look at the core facial features - people who are truly ugly are outliers. But “the average person on the street” is
Overweight
Badly dressed
Has poor posture
All of those things can be corrected, though. It doesn’t mean the “average person on the street” is ugly - it means they’re not presenting themselves properly.
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Believe me, I analyze the facial features of everyone I see probably more than anyone else in the world. Faces fascinate me and always have. I think the majority of faces that I see are average to good looking; the other circumstances surrounding them, like fat, posture and hairstyle, are often poor.
Daniel Emilfork has very atypical facial features.
In this pic I think you can see his facial structure most clearly. He has (it appears) a relatively small jaw compared to his skull vs the typical male Caucasian phenotype configuration. He has almost no fat in his face vs other people which only adds to the odd look. His nose is also out of alignment with the standard configuration.
It’ very borderline as to whether you can say he is just very off the norm or actually is expressing some genetic marker for X disease or condition.
Given he’s apparently old, healthy and intelligent I’d be inclined to go with “not handsome” vs it being some congenital genetic issue.