Steamboat Bill Jr.

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Steamboat Bill Jr.

Steamboat Bill Jr. DVD cover
Directed by Charles Reisner
Written by Carl Harbaugh
Starring Buster Keaton
Tom McGuire
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) May 12, 1928 (USA)
Running time 71 min.
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language Silent film
English intertitles
IMDb profile

Steamboat Bill Jr. (1928) is a feature-length comedy silent film featuring Buster Keaton. Released by United Artists, the film is the last product of Keaton's independent production team and set of gag writers. It was not a box-office success and proved to be the last picture Keaton would make for United Artists. Keaton would end up moving to MGM where he would make one last film with his trademark style, The Cameraman (1928 film), before all of his creative control was taken away by the studio.

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[edit] Plot

The story concerns a young man straight out of college making good as a Mississippi steamboat captain, trying to follow in his father's footsteps, and falling in love with the daughter of John James King (Tom McGuire) who is his father's business rival.

[edit] Production

Steamboat Bill's finest moments come during its cyclone sequence. The film was shot in Sacramento, building $135,000 worth of breakaway street sets on a riverbank and then filming their systematic destruction with six powerful Liberty-motor wind machines and a 120-foot crane. Keaton himself, who calculated and performed his own stunts, was suspended on a cable from the crane and hurled him from place to place, as if airborn. The resulting sequence on film is astonishing and still watchable as spectacle, if not comedy. And it comes punctuated by Keaton's single most famous stunt. Keaton stands in the street, making his way through the destruction, when an entire building facade collapses onto him. The attic window fits neatly around Keaton's body as it falls, coming within inches of flattening him (Keaton performed a similar, though smaller scale stunt, 8 years earlier, in the short film One Week). Keaton did the stunt himself with a real building section and no trickery. It has been claimed that if he had stood just inches off the correct spot Keaton would have been seriously injured or killed. It was even suggested by some biographers that Keaton, as the time in the midst of a terrible divorce, was willing to take the great bodily risk for the sake of the film. Evidence that Keaton was suicidal, however, is scant. The stunt has been re-created several times on film and television, though usually with facades made from lighter materials. One example is the MacGyver episode Deadly Silents from 1991. Legendary Hong Kong film star Jackie Chan has often cited Keaton's acrobatics-- and this stunt in particular-- as one of his primary influences.

Theatrical poster to Steamboat Billy, Jr. (1928)

An early version of the film showed the perpetually stone-faced Keaton with a wide grin during the film's final scene. The gag, however, tested very poorly and was cut from the film. No footage of the scene is known to have survived.

The film is also one of the only Keaton films to play on the stature of Keaton himself. At the time of filming, Keaton had stopped wearing his trademark pork-pie cap. During an iconic scene early in the film in which has the Keaton character trying on various hats, a scene to be copied several times in other films, he briefly has the trademark cap set on his head. Upon first glance in the mirror, the character quickly removes the cap, as if terrified to acknowledge his own fame.

The director was Charles Reisner, the credited writer was Carl Harbaugh (although Keaton wrote the film and publicly called Harbaugh useless but "on the payroll"), and also starred Ernest Torrence, Marion Byron, and Tom Lewis.

[edit] Reception

The movie was not well received at the box-office. The New York Times called the film a "gloomy comedy" and a "sorry affair." [1].

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ New York Times; May 15, 1928; Page 17.
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