This is,
to my knowledge, the only instance of Buster working on film with Charlie
Chaplin. It’s most definitely a Chaplin
film rather than a collaboration (as supposed to the Fatty Arbuckle shorts,
which see a lot more Keatonesque humor as they go on,) but while Buster’s role
is small, it’s quite memorable, and for my money, the short sequence featuring
him and Chaplin together is the height of the film.
Calvero
is a faded star, a former stage clown who’s given himself over to drink and has
been living in relative obscurity for some time. When he discovers a young woman in his
boarding house trying to commit suicide, he saves her and, at the doctor’s
request, takes her in to look after her.
The young woman, Thereza, is also a former stage artist, a ballerina
who’s fallen into ill health and poverty.
The two begin a gentle friendship, each alternately encouraging the
other to go back to performing and recover the sense of purpose they both feel
they’ve lost.
I’ll be
upfront and admit I’ve seen shockingly-little Chaplin. As a matter of fact, other than one silent
short (Sunnyside, for anyone who’s
counting,) this is really all I’ve seen.
The film is from later in his career – a period when, as I understand
it, some feel Chaplin had taken the idea of himself as an auteur a bit too much
to heart. I can see that here. The film does have kind of a self-important
air to it, and I can believe that it’s more overinflated than much of Chaplin’s
earlier work, even without having seen most of it.
The tone
is interesting. In a way, it reminds me of
a Charles Dickens book, in that there are heavy doses of both comedy (although
here, it’s physical humor rather than social satire) and sentimental drama that
borders on the maudlin – for instance, there are numerous scenes of Thereza
throwing herself weeping into Calvero’s arms, and Calvero gets plenty of “sad
clown putting on a brave face” moments.
Now, to take it back to Dickens for second, I’m not opposed to
sentimental drama as an overall rule – there are all sorts of Dickens scenes
that get me right in the feels. But for
every “David Copperfield and Peggotty talking through the keyhole” moment
(earnest and heartbreaking) there’s a “death of little Nell” moment
(overwrought to the point that you can’t take it seriously.) And that’s kind of what’s going on here. There are places where the drama is just Too
Much, and it feels silly instead of affecting.
Buster’s
character doesn’t have a name – he’s only credited as Calvero’s Partner, a
fellow aging comedian who joins Calvero in a stage act late in the film. Even though he’s only around briefly, there’s
enough to get a sense of his character.
He’s excited to be treading the boards again, but he’s also a little
edgy about everyone going on about him and Calvero being blasts from the
past. “If one more person says it’s like
old times…” he grouses.
But it’s
seeing him onstage that’s the real treat.
Chaplin’s Calvero gets the main action, hamming it up in the foreground,
but Buster is absolutely low-key hysterical in the background. The premise of their routine is that Buster
is the piano accompanist for Calvero’s violin piece and, as in any slapstick
piece worth its salt, mishaps ensue.
Buster weaves gold out of the smallest moments, whether it’s getting his
(approximately one billion pieces of) sheet music completely out of order or
realizing on a slow-burn that he’s accidentally stepped on Calvero’s
violin. There’s also a hilarious snippet
in which he’s playing so furiously that he plays himself right off his
revolving stool and, lying prone on the floor, keepings pounding away at the
keys.
Warnings
Slapstick
violence, drinking, and thematic elements (including attempted suicide.)
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