Like Our Hospitality, The Navigator is a film where, really, the best I can do is narrow
my favorite gags down to extended gag sequences; each is filled with way too
many good ones to only choose specific moments, and even as it is, there are
some fantastic sequences that didn’t make the cut. Nice problem for a comedy to have!
Searching for Company
Waking up
on the empty ship, Rollo and Betsy both search it top to bottom for another soul. Unfortunately, despite being able to hear
each other calling, they can’t manage to actually walk or run in one another’s
direction. In an
astoundingly-choreographed sequence, both characters traipse all over the ship
with an incredible talent for just missing
each other, and when Rollo finally does stumble onto Betsy, the sequence is
perfectly capped by his renewal of the marriage proposal she turned down
earlier in the film.
Breakfast Fail
The
second breakfast scene is amazing, too (I love Buster’s labor-saving inventions
so much,) but you can’t beat this one for sheer calamitous hilarity. Neither Rollo nor Betsy have ever so much as
poured their own lemonade, and their trials in the kitchen are a hoot. Highlights include Rollo turning to big
knives and carpentry tools in his futile attempts to get at canned food, fun
with eggs, and Rollo’s reaction to Betsy’s coffee.
A Passing Ship
Really,
I’m mostly interested in what happens after Rollo and Betsy give up trying to
signal the other ship, but I can’t not
mention Rollo in the life boat trying to tow
the Navigator. The best part, though, is
Betsy’s subsequent efforts to get Rollo out of the water and back onto the
ship, efforts which nearly drown both of them.
This is another sequence with a perfect ending: Betsy fainting in Rollo’s arms at the bottom
of the rope ladder, and his panicked look up at the camera as he realizes how
far he’ll have to carry her.
Diving-Suit Adventure
So many
fun gags here mixed in with the suspense of repairing the ship underwater
before the islanders board it. A lot of
them are pretty cartoony, but they work well.
I like the “caution” sign Rollo puts up around his work area, his duel
with a swordfish, using a lobster as a cutting tool, and my favorite, “filling”
a bucket with water, “washing” his hands in it, and then “dumping” the water
out.
Tiny but Deadly Cannon
So
simple, but so fantastic. Who doesn’t
love the sight of Rollo desperately trying to run away from a miniature cannon
that he’s accidentally tied to his foot (don’t ask how – it’s Buster)? His flailing and running around is great, and
I love it when he figures out how to use it as a weapon against the islanders.
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