If we
define a
feature film as being more then
four reels (approximately 40 minutes), than GRANDMA'S BOY was comedian
Harold Lloyd's first
feature. It is a bright and clever comedy, the kind of
good-natured, warm-hearted movie that would always characterize not
only
Lloyd's best films but also those of producer Hal Roach, who would
later become famous for the Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang
films.
These two men were great friends and labored to make to make
each Lloyd film as
good as it could be.
GRANDMA'S BOY contains a
wonderful example of
how they worked together. The main story is about a boy (Harold) who is
meek and cowardly, unable to stand up to bullies or fight for the girl
he loves. The middle section of the film is a flashback to
the
Civil War, telling the story the Boy's grandfather, and how he became a
hero. Lloyd played the Civil War sequence
completely straight, and Roach, worrying about a long section of the
film where the audience would have nothing to laugh at, wanted it
cut. Lloyd argued that the sequence was essential to the
film,
and Roach complained that it stopped the film dead in its
tracks.
Neither one was willing to budge, so they worked out a brilliant
compromise. Little gag sequences were shot that could easily
be
edited into the finished feature, so that Lloyd got the story he wanted
and and Roach retained the laughs he wanted. That dedication
to quality
would mark all of Lloyd's silent features, of which GRANDMA'S BOY is
one of his best.
- JB