|
Director |
|
Year |
1919-36 |
Country |
Harold Lloyd, Adolphe Menjou, Bebe Daniels, Snub Pollard, Mildred Davis
Certificate |
U |
Length |
1746 mins |
Label |
OPTIM |
Format |
DVD Colour |
Region |
2 |
Aspect |
4:3 Full Frame |
Cat No |
OPTD0705 |
Main Language |
English |
1918-21, Various , DVD
£15.99
RRP: £19.99
Save £4.00
A collection of ten Harold Lloyd movies made between 1918-21. Features Two-Gun Gu...
Harold Lloyd was one of the great comic pioneers of the silent era, during the laughter-filled, glory years of the 1920s when Wall Street was booming and seemingly everyone was going and getting everything. By the time he turned to feature comedies, audiences had already taken his character – the affable boy with the trademark glasses whose hilarious antics parodied the American dream of success – into their hearts. When readers of Photoplay magazine were asked to choose their favourite comedian in 1922, Charlie Chaplin received 3,060 votes, but Lloyd got 4,650. His films were as popular as Chaplin’s, and he always outgrossed Buster Keaton. “If plain laughter is any criterion,” James Agee wrote in 1949, “few have equalled him, and nobody has ever beaten him.”
The definitive, nine-disc Harold Lloyd Collection from Optimum, supervised by Lloyd's granddaughter Suzanne Lloyd, contains thirteen shorts (including High and Dizzy, Get Out and Get Under, Number, Please?, Now or Never, Among Those Present, I Do, and Never Weaken) and all of the classic silent features. A Sailor-Made Man began as a two-reeler but grew into a four-reel feature, Grandma’s Boy is a Civil War comedy in which cowardly Harold winds up a hero, Dr. Jack is distinguished by its sheer physical exuberance and Safety Last! contains that unforgettably iconic image of Harold clinging to the hands of a gigantic clock on the side of a skyscraper, hundreds of feet above the street, a decade before one Kong attempted a similar feat.
In Why Worry, he meets a giant with a toothache in South America. In Girl Shy Harold is a tongue-tied, small-town boy who becomes the best-selling author of a love-making manual. Hot Water has him up to his neck in mother-in-law trouble, The Freshman is the finest parody of the college-football hero ever made and For Heaven’s Sake is another thrill picture, substituting a runaway bus for the skyscraper. The Kid Brother is Lloyd’s most sumptuous achievement and probably his finest, while Speedy gives us New York City, Babe Ruth, and a runaway streetcar. Also included are five talkies (Welcome Danger, Feet First, Movie Crazy, The Cat’s-Paw, The Milky Way) and a whole array of extras that will keep you entertained for hours. The great silent comedies never become dated. Just try to catch your breath between laughs.
R. Dixon Smith on 13th June 2007
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