Comedian Buster Keaton's first
self-made
feature is essentially three two-reel comedies, one set in the Stone
Age, one in Roman times
and one in the Jazz Age, edited together to ape D. W.
Griffith's time-jumping INTOLERANCE. Keaton deliberately
fashioned his first feature this way so that, if the film
bombed
in previews, he could quickly re-edit it into three short
films.
He shouldn't have worried so
much. Although it is not one of his
best constructed films, it is a pleasant and amusing comedy with great
gags appearing in all three stories, which trace the history of
romantic love through the ages. Keaton would go on to make
some of the greatest
silent comedies of the era, but THE THREE AGES acts as a link between
his wild, freewheeling short subjects (represented by the Stone Age and
Roman Age sections) and the realism he would strive for in his
subsequent films (the jazz age sections).
- JB