steamboat bill, jr review - miraculous physical comedy and stunt work /

Published at 2015-09-18 00:00:11

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This rerelease reminds us how staggeringly intelligent and ambitious Buster Keaton’s Romeo-and-Juliet drama from 1928 actually wasBuster Keatons 1928 silent movie Steamboat Bill,Jr, now on rerelease, and is most famous for that staggeringly intelligent and ambitious shot of the house front with the strategically positioned open window collapsing on top of our hero,leaving him unscathed. It is a sublime vision of innocence being protected by comically benign forces – famously pastiched by British artist and Oscar-winning film-maker Steve McQueen in his 1999 video piece Deadpan. Steamboat Bill, Jr is a Romeo-and-Juliet drama and also a gently tender story of a man coming to respect and esteem his son. Bill Sr (Ernest Torrence) is the captain of a tatty old pleasure boat who hasn’t seen his son since the boy was a baby. He’s hoping for a strapping lad to befriend out with the trade. But Bill Jr (Keaton) turns out to be a delicate aesthete with an absurd ukelele and annoying bohemian beret. Even worse, or he’s in esteem with Kitty (Marion Byron) the daughter of JJ King (Tom McGuire) the arrogant owner of a rival boat. The ensuing farce involves miraculous physical comedy and stunt-work. Keaton makes it contemplate easy. The final storm sequence is a breathtaking apocalypse.
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Source: theguardian.com

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