This
early Buster Keaton feature is remarkably fun.
The story’s fairly thin by design, but it gives you a great idea of
Buster’s inventive comic sensibility and the fantastic films he’d make in the
years to come. This was actually the
first feature film that he created;
although he starred in The Saphead a
few years earlier, he was in it strictly as an actor. Here, he’s the lead actor, the director, and
an uncredited writer, presumably cooking up the terrific gags and creative
comedic bits.
The
central conceit of the film is that love is the same through all of time, and
to demonstrate this idea, the same love story is told in stages in three
different eras: the Stone Age, the Roman
Age, and the Modern Age (in this case, of course, 1923.) In all three sections, Buster plays slightly
different variations of his intrepid “little fellow” character, and the same
actors play the girl he loves, her parents, and his rival across the assorted
periods. This, by the way, is why the
plot isn’t terribly substantial – it’s the same story multiplied by three,
given time-appropriate twists, and separated into chunks.
It’s
amusing to see how the different aspects of the love story are transposed for
the different times. A fight with clubs
in the Stone Age becomes a chariot race in the Roman Age becomes a baseball
game in the Modern Age, and so on. There
are all sorts of little comedic touches that reward your attention. My personal favorite is Roman Age Buster’s
chariot – it’s rather haphazardly pulled by four steeds of varying breeds and
sizes, at least one of which is a donkey.
(Poor Buster always has an uphill battle. His Stone Age ride, a brontosaurus, is a boat
compared to his rival’s sleeker, trendier mammoth.)
Like in
Our Hospitality, Buster provides
plenty of gags at the expense of his period setting. While there’s a little fun poked at their
old-timey ways, however, the main attraction this time around is an amusing
collection of anachronisms. Stone Age’s
Buster’s “card” when he goes a-callin’ is a small stone tablet with a stick
figure rendition of him carved into it, and Roman Age Buster has a spare wheel
on the back of his chariot.
One
thing I always love about Buster’s work is his character’s clever and
unexpected solutions to his problems, and that’s definitely evident here. I think Roman Age Buster seems to be the most
on top of things – he comes up with quite the fix for his jalopy of a chariot,
and Aesop would’ve been surprised at his method of making friends with lions –
but all three have their moments.
All in
all, though it’s not on par with his best stuff, it makes for a good time, and
there’s a lot to love. Plus, the sight
of Buster in a caveman costume and wig is enough to make me giggle.
Warnings
Slapstick
violence, some drinking, a rather mean gag at the expense of a poor cat, and a
little outdated racial humor.
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