This is
my one my favorite Buster Keaton shorts. So funny, so creative, and so, so Buster.
I’ve used it as a “gateway short” to introduce people to Buster’s work,
and it’s served me well.
Buster
and his new bride receive a DIY home-in-a-box as a wedding gift, and the short
chronicles their first week as a married couple while they struggle to assemble
their house. Thanks to some meddling
from a jealous rival, they wind up working off of bad instructions, and as a result…
well, you can see for yourself in the image above. Despite the young couple’s best efforts,
everything that can go wrong does, and the story culminates in probably the
best climax out of any of Buster’s shorts.
Front
and center, this short displays Buster’s engineering talent and the shrewd ways
he used it to comedic advantage. Everything
about the patchwork house is absolute dilapidated perfection. It looks fantastic on its own, and when you
throw in the various added wrinkles of cleverness Buster throws in (the
second-story front door, the porch railing that doubles as a ladder, the stretchy,
sagging ceiling,) it’s an absolute delight.
The humor that Buster mines from this house, and the inventiveness he
packs into it, is just incredible.
The
story lends itself well to its vignette style, so it wanders comfortably, but the
gags build continually, getting bigger and more outrageous until we get to the
tremendous final scene. Right from the
beginning, there’s a fun sequence of circular gags that gets us off to a smart,
snappy start, and it only gets better from there. I like Buster’s little creative touches, like
writing “WELCOME” upside-down on the mat before flipping it around – there’s no
reason for him to write it upside-down, and it isn’t even really played like a
joke, but it and moments like it help to infuse the short with so much
personality. And of course, the modest
cameraman – who offers some quick ‘n’ easy censorship when Buster’s wife drops
the soap over the side of the tub and has to retrieve it – is a classic Buster
moment. He wasn’t really known for breaking the fourth wall, but
whenever he did, he did it like a pro.
(Also, for whatever reason, I just love it when Buster touches his face
so you can see how dark his hands look compared to his white pancake
makeup. It makes me smile.)
I’m
quite charmed by co-star Sybil Seely in this short. She’s a good choice to play Buster’s wife –
since this short doesn’t have the typical storyline of Buster falling
for/trying to win over The Girl, there’s less for the female lead to do, and so
it helps to have someone so personable and engaging in the role to make it spark
a bit more. She and Buster are sweet
together (the moment where he gives her the tiniest peck on the lips and then
sheepishly disappears around the corner is too adorable,) and they have great
comedic timing as a pair.
I’ve
sung the praises of this short’s ending elsewhere, so I won’t go into the
details again. Suffice to say that it is
fabulous, and, considering how early
it came in Buster’s career, it’s a pretty telling sign of the great things to
come.
Warnings
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