In the fifties and sixties, Robert Youngson had great success in
reintroducing classic silent comedy to modern day audiences with films
like WHEN
COMEDY WAS KING and
THE GOLDEN AGE OF COMEDY. Lloyd himself, who would not let
his
films be excerpted for any of the Youngson compilations, probably
couldn't help but notice the success of such films and tried his hand
at making his own. The results - HAROLD LLOYD'S WORLD OF
COMEDY
and HAROLD LLOY'D FUNNY SIDE OF LIFE -received critical praise but did
not light up the box office, and so in that decade when
audiences and
college students were rediscovering Chaplin and Keaton, as well as
sound era comedians such as Laurel and Hardy, The Marx Brothers and W.
C. Fields, Lloyd and his films were unfortunately left behind.
These two compilation films,
supervised by Lloyd
himself, are not the best way to introduce yourself to the
comedian - the best way, of course, is to plunge right in with any of
Lloyd's classic features like SAFETY LAST or THE KID BROTHER.
The concept of WORLD OF COMEDY is to introduce Harold through
a
short series of gags, then shorter gag sequences, and then end with
generous excerpts from his films, including some of his sound features.
Thus we get some moments from a few shorts plus SAFETY LAST
and
THE FRESHMAN, followed by the turkey raffle and car sequence from HOT WATER,
and then long offerings from WHY WORRY?, GIRL SHY,
PROFESSOR BEWARE, MOVIE CRAZY and FEET FIRST. Most of the
sequences are still brilliant, but there is no context and very little
narration. The film needs a little explanation as to how and
why
Harold got into the situations he did, as well as some background on
the man himself and his place in movie history - what he represented in
the twenties, for example. Without that, it is just one long
scene after the next, and as funny as it all is, it gets tiring after a
while. The sound effects added to the silent sequences are
not
that intrusive (no slide whistles, thank God!) but the music is often
overly somber in sequences that need a lighter musical
touch.
- JB
The followup film, HAROLD
LLOYD'S FUNNY SIDE OF
LIFE, simplifies matters by starting off with a few gag sequences from
various films and plunging directly into almost the entire feature THE
FRESHMAN. Again, not the best way to meet Lloyd but,
considering
I became a Lloyd fan by watching badly narrated excerpts shown on a
snowy, faraway TV channel I couldn't quite tune in, it's not the worst
way either.
½ -
JB