Buster deserved more respect in the sound era and he should have gotten to write his own material...because he was a brilliant writer and a fantastic actor...and he had a beautiful voice.
This was one film Buster Keaton never liked - he felt forced by Joseph Schenck into doing it and never really appreciated it. Buster saw the story as a farce, which he thought he was all wrong for. He filmed the opening sequence in color because he figured anything would help the story. The finale with the chase of the brides was kind of an afterthought - the original ending where he just ran into the sunset seemed kind of bland to Buster - and, as is usually the case, it is what everyone remembers about the film. Definitely one of the great chases in silent cinema.
I'm looking for a short film that starts with a little mouse selling apples on the street for her husband, who looks abusive, who then sees another richer woman through the window and runs off to woo her. Help me identify the short film? I think it's from Warner's 30's or 40's
My parents turned 9 in 1925...lucky them. Buster was quite the stunt man
Buster deserved more respect in the sound era and he should have gotten to write his own material...because he was a brilliant writer and a fantastic actor...and he had a beautiful voice.
This was one film Buster Keaton never liked - he felt forced by Joseph Schenck into doing it and never really appreciated it. Buster saw the story as a farce, which he thought he was all wrong for. He filmed the opening sequence in color because he figured anything would help the story. The finale with the chase of the brides was kind of an afterthought - the original ending where he just ran into the sunset seemed kind of bland to Buster - and, as is usually the case, it is what everyone remembers about the film. Definitely one of the great chases in silent cinema.
When will you make more Muppet Labs compilation videos?
I'm looking for a short film that starts with a little mouse selling apples on the street for her husband, who looks abusive, who then sees another richer woman through the window and runs off to woo her. Help me identify the short film? I think it's from Warner's 30's or 40's
"He Was Her Man" (1937)
@@samp.8099 thanks you