ABSOLUTE Best Funny Scenes from Silent Films - In color!
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- čas přidán 30. 04. 2021
- Need a good laugh? Here are 28 hillariously funny scenes from silent films. They really knew physical comedy back then. The clips have also all been gloriously colorized for the first time.
Catch your favourite stars like Charlie Chaplin, Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton at their finest, ripping yarns like only they can. The joke's on you!
Some of the famous film stars you'll see are:
1. Buster Keaton gets rejected by a hatcheck girl without a word in Seven Chances (1925)
2. Buster Keaton running from the police in Cops (1922)
3. Charlie Chaplin could get a lot of comedy out of sliding door, The Adventurer 1917
4. Keaton said this gag got some of the biggest laughs of his career. The ending was believed missing but was rediscovered in Russia. Hard Luck (1921).
5. Buster Keaton's film-making philosophy: "I always want the audience to out-guess me, and then I double-cross them."
6. The Bell Boy was released in 1918. Buster Keaton's gag still works a century later.
7. Buster Keaton being chased by a gang of murderers in The High Sign (1921)
8. Creatively depicting a phone conversation College Chums (1907)
9. Charlie Chaplin makes a sandwich go a long way. Behind the Screen (1916)
10. Buster Keaton's The Haunted House was released over 100 years ago on February 10, 1921.
11. "Chaplin wasn't the funniest. I wasn't the funniest. Stan Laurel was the funniest." - Buster Keaton
12. Mary Pickford sneezes. The mask-wearing crowd scatters during the Influenza Pandemic of 1918. Daddy-Long-Legs (1919)
13. Buster Keaton takes the elevator. The Goat (1921)
14. "Railroads are a great prop. You can do some awful wild things with railroads." - Buster Keaton
15. Family portrait gone wrong. My Wife's Relations (1922)
16. Buster Keaton's car gets stuck on the train tracks - Parlor, Bedroom and Bath (1931)
17. The last movie Buster Keaton made with Roscoe Arbuckle before going solo. The Garage (1920)
18. Smooth moves by Buster Keaton. The Cameraman (1928)
19. Gloria Swanson gets revenge on Lawrence Gray. Stage Struck (1925)
20. Harold Lloyd's amazing reflection gag. The Marathon (1919)
21. Buster Keaton 42 years apart, in 1920 and 1962
22. Billy Bevan accidentally vacuums up a pooch. Wall Street Blues (1924)
23. Believed to be the most expensive shot of the silent era, with a price tag of $42,000. The General (1926).
24. A Buster Keaton montage.
25. Buster Keaton - master of the hat.
26. Harold Lloyd distracts a police officer. Never Weaken (1921)
27. Buster Keaton helps Tom Wilson with his coffee. My Wife's Relations (1922)
28. Buster Keaton directing ghosts.The Haunted House (1921)
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These video relics are better than the modern movies we have today. 🎬🎼🎧🎹🎬😎👍
Bro 💀
You said it! 👍
This was mostly Buster. Rightfully so. He was brilliant and very funny!
it's so mind boggling remarkable that we have reached a point where we have moving images spanning over 100 years. Which means that soon, no one will be able to claim that history is boring cuz its just paintings and black&white picturse.
THEY DON'T MAKE MOVIE HALF THIS GOOD ANY MORE . I MISS THE GOLDEN AGE OF MOVIE MAKING .
AGREED! Sad isn't it?
Out of all of them... Buster Keaton was the hands-down genius. Chaplin, Lloyd, Turpin, and Arbuckle did funny -- but Keaton combined stunts and mind-blowing special effects. Q.V. his film "The Playhouse, " and try to figure out how he managed to do the whole "One person playing multiple roles" combined with "one actress playing twins" ages before Cronenberg and Zemeckis pulled it off with computers.
Keaton was the true innovator of the era, and I can only imagine what magic he might have made if some time traveler popped back to the 1920s and said, "Hey, dude.... check this shit out..." Hell, he would probably have made the entire Star Wars saga or MCU look like a 1990s grad student thesis defense.
Agreed... Keaton would go rapid-fire and pack dozens of bits in to a short time, whereas the others would do a prolonged gag and wring every angle out of it. A good example is Chaplin's sliding door bit... Also Keaton was much more of a risk taker with truly dangerous, spectacular stunts.
This dude ass
2:46 I knew what was going to happen the first time I saw this and still laughed!
4:59 I couldn’t even tell where/when filming was stopped for “real man” to step in before starting again. Perfect!
7:06 There’s an episode of Gilligan’s Island where a movie camera washes up onshore and they use the camera to help them get off the island. This same thing happens while Gilligan is operating the camera. They used a bit of Buster Keaton!
0:27 that actually was badass right there
Oh so funny! What an imagination the writers had to craft such comical scenes!
3:01 “Super Dave Osborn” did this type of bit many times in his long running series on cable. // A wonderful use of a small set in those comedies inside a house.
1:27😂did he kiss that guy?!😂
Priceless
Absolutely beautiful - thank you.
Er war mit der Beste ! Wenn ich heute sehe wie lange sie für einen Gag brauchen Buster würde weinen
Silent film hit different in color.
Fascinating ❤️😊
Happy to do it for you Mr. Keaton
How Immersive!
Great channel!
Thank you for these, nice to see the less-known stunts!
2:00 LOL!
Geniální Buster 👍🏻
Pretty good staff 👍🏻
great. Wish they were in the original B&W though.
BUSTER KEATON GENIOUS TOTAL.
The others are OK but for me Harold Lloyd was an accomplished stuntman and my personal favourite unfortunately this clip did not do him justice. Very funny and enjoyable though!
'Safety Last' is one my favorite silent films.
“hilariously funny”
Sounds redundant because both words are the same meaning (great description and video)!
Funny is a spectrum. It runs from "nose exhale" to pants peeing.
It is cool to see how these comedy vignettes recycled themselves through the decades, the Marx Brothers and Abbott and Costello all have Vaudeville and Burlesque backgrounds.
7:13😂😂😂😂😂😃😃
2:48 I guessed right about what would happen and I still laughed! 3:00 I didn’t see that coming but neither did they.😊 7:48 Because the earlier clip, I knew that was going to happen.
Buster Keaton was so
Yes he was!
It'll be a great day when DeOldify software gets replaced - by something which doesn't mindlessly convert everything into weak shades of purple and beige. 🙄
Totally agree. Or better yet, just leave them as their creators left them to us: in glorious black and white. Colorization - even the best available techniques - distract horribly from the intent of the directors and actors; the Keaton clips from "Cops" are a case in point. While the colors flash and alter back and forth, the timing, gag executions and set-ups: are largely lost.
What is the name of the song that starts at 11:23?
Parlor bedroom and bath is a sound film
3:17. "Phone booth"!? What's a "PHONE BOOTH"?
I like the sequence where the engine goes by in the opposite direction pulling only a caboose at the grade crossing and collides and drags the dudes a half a mile down the line
👍😂😂😂😂😂😂смешно!
Legendar history movies era . 😂😂 nja Colorised old black White film interesing 😎👍
Better than any film made today. Although I just can't get into Charlie Chaplin because he was a communist. But Keaton and Lloyd are my favorites. As well as another Hal Roach comedy, 'Our Gang.'
Notnew
Jackie Chan has said Charlie Chaplin was one of his biggest inspirations, and as soon as I saw that sliding door scene I realized just how much of an influence he was. That scene, if sped up a bit, could have been a Jackie Chan fight scene.
In this video there's a bias for Buster Keaton. I don't criticise that, but it should be included more clips from Chaplin, Turpin and Laurel and Hardy, to be honest.
non of these characters are alive today, yeah I don't know why I did this
4:28 Hitler used to be so much funnier in his younger days.