Continuing
my tour through Buster Keaton’s classic shorts.
Some of these are later efforts when he was starting to think about
features and his interest in shorts was waning, while others are topnotch comic
offerings. Here are shorts 11-15.
Convict
13 (1920)
A
tried-and-true premise: through a case
of mistaken identity, the innocent Buster is sent to prison as a crook. Variously, he tries to escape jail, quell a
riot, and woo the warden’s daughter. We
get literal gallows humor, fun with uniformed disguises, and an excellent fight
involving a ball and chain – fantastically funny.
The
Scarecrow (1920)
The
plot here is so thin that it’s hard to describe. Basically, two farmhands/roomies are fighting
over a girl, and there are a lot of scrapes and chases. More important are the comic sequences. There’s the famous Rube Goldberg house in
which everything serves a double function, an extended scene of Buster being
chased by a dog (Fatty Arbuckle’s, actually – the short puts his
ladder-climbing skills to good use,) and Buster’s superb imitation of a
scarecrow. Plus, he walks across a river
on his hands, just cuz. How awesome was
this guy?
The
Goat (1921)
More
mistaken identity to facilitate more chases.
Buster accidentally winds up on the wanted poster for a notorious
criminal and finds himself beset by police (admittedly a common position for
him.) Buster is hilarious and a boss all
throughout – he vaults over a guy to leap out a window, puts an elevator to
fabulous use in a chase scene, and is dragged
down the street holding onto the back
of a moving car. The word you’re looking for is, “Wow.”
The
Blacksmith (1922)
This is
a curious entry. It’s well-regarded as
one of Buster’s worst independent shorts; this is on the Buster scale of “worst,”
so it’s still funny and entertaining, but it lacks the care and attention put
into his best work. The short, in which
Buster causes havoc as an assistant blacksmith, is cheaper and blunter than we
typically expect from him. However,
there’s a recently-recovered alternate version that’s wonderfully funny and
much more Buster. The best bit from the
original version has Buster fitting a horse with some snazzy new shoes, and the
newly discovered print adds great gags involving, among other things, a
cardboard cutout of a car, a sly proposal, and some clever pulley tricks.
The
Love Nest (1923)
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