Buster Keaton

The Balloonatic

1923

Silent, B&W

Director - Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton

'The Balloonatic' is a charming little film. With gags that are especially rich and otherworldly, one day Keaton wanders off from an amusement park and winds up floating away in an experimental balloon. All this is merely a device to land him in the middle of a forest where he encounters a girl. Before he patches up the balloon and takes off, it becomes clear that she is by far a better outdoorsman than he.

CAST

Buster Keaton

Phyllis Haver

CREW

Joseph M. Schenck - Producer

Edward F. Cline - Screenwriter / Director

Buster Keaton - Screenwriter / Director

Elgin Lessley - Cinematographer

Buster Keaton

The Blacksmith

1922

Silent, B&W

Buster Keaton is the assistant to the town blacksmith, a big, mean-tempered sort. As it was common it was for a blacksmith to double as a car mechanic in the early '20s, Keaton is equally inept at both tasks. Keaton helps a girl's horse pick out just the right shoe, and he methodically and hilariously destroys a gleaming new Rolls Royce. Eventually, everyone is out to throttle Keaton for his countless blunders, but somehow he still manages to get the girl!

CAST

Buster Keaton- Blacksmith's assistant

Joe Roberts- Blacksmith

Virginia Fox- Horsewoman

CREW

Joseph M. Schenck- Producer

Buster Keaton- Screenwriter / Director

Malcolm St. Clair- Screenwriter / Director

Elgin Lessley- Cinematographer

Lee Erwin- Composer (Music Score)


Buster Keaton

Cops

1922 - 33 min.

Silent, B&W

Keaton longingly looks at his girl through what appear to be prison bars. In reality, it's the gate to the mansion where she lives. The girl sends Keaton away, telling him not to return until he is a success in business. Keaton attempts to do so, acquiring, through convoluted means, a horse, wagon, and a load of stolen furniture. Somehow he drives his wagon into the middle of a policeman's parade, where an anarchist's bomb falls in his lap. Carelessly, he lights his cigarette with it and throws it away. It explodes in the middle of the parade, and suddenly Keaton is pursued by every cop in the city. The surrealistic vision of Keaton, small and alone, evading these hundreds upon hundreds of policemen is unforgettable. The filmmaker was both athlete and comic, and here he makes maximum use of both talents, racing down streets, playing a balancing act on a ladder, and casually grabbing hold of a car as it flies past, all in an attempt to evade the cops.

CAST

Buster Keaton- The Young Man

Joe Roberts- Police Chief

Virginia Fox- Mayor's Daughter

Edward F. Cline- Hobo

CREW

Joseph M. Schenck- Producer

Edward F. Cline- Screenwriter / Director

Elgin Lessley- Cinematographer

Buster Keaton- Editor / Screenwriter / Director


Buster Keaton

Garage

1919 - 25 min.

Silent, B&W

Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle and portray co-workers at a garage/fire house (guess which building, out of the whole town, catches fire?). This film shows a marked development in director Arbuckle's comedy - instead of frantic slapstick, the gags build slowly with a determined, but twisted, logic. Arbuckle and Keaton work seamlessly together, with a rapport that at times resembles the later comic duo Laurel and Hardy.

CAST

Buster Keaton- Mechanic/Fireman

Molly Malone- Garage Owner's Daughter

Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle- Mechanic/Fireman

CREW

Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle- Director

Elgin Lessley- Cinematographer

Buster Keaton

The Playhouse

1921

Silent, B&W

'The Playhouse' features the famous theater sequence in which Buster Keaton plays every role, from the stage actors to the orchestra and audience, appearing in the same frame two, three - and in one scene, nine times. This was amazing technical wizardry in a day when special effects really were special. The film bounces from dream to reality, from optical illusion to confusion, all with a playhouse as backdrop, and the various theater skits are a prime example of Keaton's infinite comic variety. In one scene he disguises himself as a monkey so effectively that it's easy to forget he's really human.

CAST

Buster Keaton

Joe Roberts

Virginia Fox

CREW

Joseph M. Schenck - Producer

Edward F. Cline - Screenwriter / Director

Buster Keaton - Screenwriter / Director

Elgin Lessley - Cinematographer

Entertainment in motion

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