Today’s
short isn’t as flush with stunts or gags as a lot of Buster’s work, but his
creativity and mechanical sensibilities are definitely on display. The released short is actually the second
version of it. The first time around,
Buster broke his ankle while filming and, much to his dismay, had to put
shooting on hold due to an injury he got doing something as pedestrian as getting his slap shoe
caught in an escalator (he lived on a different level, no question about it.) His resulting irritation made him scrap the
whole production, but he must have still liked the idea well enough, because he
came back and remade it later.
Thanks
to a slight diploma mixup, newly-graduated botanist Buster is hired as an
electrical engineer to update a wealthy man’s house (and why doesn’t Buster
point out that he’s not an electrical engineer?
Because he gets a look at the guy’s daughter, obviously!) Now, when most
of us hear the words “electricity” and “house,” we probably picture stuff like
lightswitches. Not Buster! When the family returns home from vacation,
he has a plethora of labor-saving electrified features to show them, including
an escalator, a dishwasher (in 1922, people!), a tub that runs on a track from
the bed to the bathroom, and a pool table and sets itself up with the flick of
a switch. Of course, it’s only a matter
of time until the real engineer, who
was passed over for Buster, shows up to get his revenge crossed-wires-style.
As is
typical for Buster’s highly-mechanical shorts, the electric doodads are the
main attraction here. Some are fairly
impossible (seems like a bathtub can’t be both mobile and hooked up to the plumbing,) while others, like the electric
trains running on a track from the kitchen to the dining room to carry dishes
in and out, were used by Buster in real life.
They’re all pretty fun and make a nice window into how Buster’s mind
operated.
The
short is a little lighter on the comedy, but there are still some good
bits. Buster really sells his interest
in botany in the opening scene by completely losing himself in the flower that the
girl next to him is wearing in her hair, and there’s an amusing sight gag of
Buster tying a rope like a necktie. He
also mines the escalator for all it’s worth, particularly in a scene where it
malfunctions as he’s trying to lug a heavy trunk up the stairs.
Okay,
so I knew Big Joe Roberts was in nearly all of Buster’s independent shorts (he’s
the man who hires Buster to electrify his house,) and I knew Virginia Fox (the
girl) was in a lot, too, but I don’t think I realized just how many she
appeared in! It’s only since I started
doing full reviews of the shorts that I noticed I was writing her name almost
every week. IMDb tells me that Roberts
was in sixteen of Buster’s nineteen shorts (plus Three Ages and Our
Hospitality,) which sounds about right to me, while Fox, surprisingly, was
in ten! Even though she frequently doesn’t
have much in do in these shorts, I always enjoy seeing her.
Warnings
Slapstick
violence and some don’t-try-this-at-home with electricity.
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