Buster Keaton: Complete Short Films – 1917-1923 (Review)

Rob Simpson

The history of cinema is fascinating when journeying back to its origins, illustrating how much has changed over the course of time. Take science fiction and horror as the prime examples, both are worlds away from their respective zeitgeists – almost as if comparing night with day. Comedy is different in that it has so many different types and distinctions that the very early stuff is just as valid as the modern. Going back a few years shy of a century, slapstick was king and its serving monarch – Buster Keaton. With his centenary looming, Eureka has re-issued their previous complete short films box-set on Blu-Ray; including his early collaborations with Fatty Arbuckle and ending with a run of commercially and critically successful shorts that saw him become one of the greatest film icons of all time.

In recent years Eureka’s lionized Masters of Cinema imprint has released countless classic, lost and forgotten silent films with masters as fresh as the day they left the printing press thanks to outfits like the F.W. Murnau Foundation. Even with its fair share of lost films, Germany is a world away from the safekeeping and restoration of American silent cinema; an apathy and negligence that has gone down in notoriety and legend thanks to the Martin Scorsese’s of the world. Unfortunately, this means the presentation of the 32 short films is deeply inconsistent. Some are besieged by merciless grain, others by the discolouration associated with neglectful safekeeping and the need to re-edit from various cuts, while others are perfect – it is a lottery from film to film. Contrarily that lottery is also home to some treats with new inter-titles, musical accompaniments and alternate endings, cleaning up the films however possible.

The earliest films date back to 1917 and see Keaton as a supporting player to Roscoe ‘Fatty’ Arbuckle. While these films are often funny in their own right, they lack a certain something – like Laurel without Hardy or Abbott without Costello; they are half of a complete picture. If history was somehow different, Arbuckle and Keaton may have become a great double act. This is evidenced in the short film ‘Good Night, Nurse’ in which Arbuckle is taken to a revolutionary sanatorium that claims to be able to cure alcoholism, that film ends with Arbuckle cross-dressing to escape. There are glimmers of chemistry in the earliest films, a connection that never really had the chance to flourish as these where Arbuckle films in which Keaton featured, an apprenticeship rather than a partnership.

Keaton is regarded as one of the finest comedy performers of all time and with good reason, at his best his physicality and timing defied logic, however, given the number of films he did during 1917-23 it’s only natural that every short doesn’t live up to the reputation of history – he’s only human, after all. Some were a procession of fragmented gags, others were endlessly derivative in that Keaton played an unconventionally attractive, unlucky romantic lead in the exact same situation in a variety of places and others were sadly forgettable. It happens with any director or actor.

There are some interesting shorts to be found outside of the classics. Slapstick and cartoons have a great deal in common and the Balloonatic is the perfect capsule of this. Its story sees Keaton compete with a young outdoorswoman after being swept away by a runaway hot air balloon – as only Keaton could. The little moments of competition lack connective tissue from one to the next, but the audacity of the man makes you question how much is real and how much is done through clever staging. Hindsight doesn’t help either with the very DNA of this short being found in countless cartoons the world over. There’s a thought that needs to be sat on – Buster Keaton was doing things that only cartoons could recreate.

Instead of finding his antics humorous, the absolute control and insanity of some of the things he did make wide-eyed wonder and amazement just as much of a legitimate response as rolling in the aisles.

BUSTER KEATON: THE COMPLETE SHORTS

Another such short is the Scarecrow in which the set is just as much of a character as either Keaton or Joe Roberts, all building up to a centrepiece chase with a persistent dog. With its series of ropes and pulley’s hanging over the dinner table, the Scarecrow features one of the most inventively funny dinner table sequences ever conceived. A scene whose influence can be found throughout comedy history but as is often the case with such landmarks the magic of the original has never been recaptured. Both the Scarecrow and The Balloonatic are indicative of the varying quality of this window of output. Every single one of the 32 will have its moments whether the crossed wires of Daydreams or the practical effects of the Goat, whether funny or not at the very least you have to appreciate the staging and spectacle.

Leaving the best till last is the classics, the very same films that make it wonderfully clear where everyone’s favourite stuntman, Jackie Chan, got all his best tricks – an influence and adulation that he openly confesses to. 4 films stand out above all others: The High Sign, Convict 13, The Haunted House and Cops.

Convict 13 and Cops elaborate upon one trope reoccurring throughout a great deal of these films in the chase. Where Keaton did it differently, however, is that his films would have scenes in which 10, 20, 30 maybe more would be running after him, add to that the slightly off rhythm of this era of silent film and there’s something unusually satisfying. Convict 13 starts with him making a mess out of golf before being tricked by an escaping prisoner and ending with him working with that prison as a guard preventing a breakout. His elastic acrobatics are at there finest and unlike the other films, this had fights, not too dissimilar to that found in a Jackie Chan film, actually. In the manic finale he beats up the prisoners with a punching bag on a long rope, the accidental swagger of Keaton wielding this makeshift weapon is hypnotic. Cops brilliance is at its finest in a sequence with a ladder resting on top of a fence, he is sat in the middle balancing as police on either side try their hardest to catch the lovable rogue. This elaborate balanced see-saw and the failed hanging of Convict 13 are the best examples of the cartoon-like magic Keaton possessed.

Slapstick like any form of comedy is in the eye of the beholder, some will find it funny while others won’t. The beauty in Buster Keaton’s work all but takes the need to find something funny out of the mix. Instead of finding his antics humorous, the absolute control and insanity of some of the things he did make wide-eyed wonder and amazement just as much of a legitimate response as rolling in the aisles.

Then there’s the surrealism that features in the best 2 films, yes, that’s right, surrealism and Buster Keaton! The High Sign starts with a gun that never hits where it is aimed and ends with a house of doors and traps that is about the most perfect example of physical comedy I’ve ever seen. One shot of Keaton’s assailant getting his head trapped between door and door frame is awe-inspiringly funny. This may well rank among the greatest comedy shorts of all time. And while the haunted house may not be as funny, the invention and surreal physicality are every bit the high sign’s equal. The scene in which a group of thieves try to scare Keaton away from their hideout, both dress as a skeleton and build a man who then comes to life incorporate a George Méliès-like oddity into a short of physicality where the Jackie Chan influence is as loud as could be.

It’s not often that a boxset of 32 films comes along, the value for money in this set is self-evident. Equal parts funny and inventive, this is about the most perfect comedy education you can receive from one of the greatest comedy masters of all time. While the wild variation of quality is apparent and perhaps some of the lesser inclusions are best served up to all you Buster Keaton completists, at the same time there has never been a better reason to join those completists, hand-in-hand. Eureka’s boxset is one of the best home video releases in years.

BUSTER KEATON: THE COMPLETE SHORTS (1917-1923) IS OUT ON MASTERS OF CINEMA BLU-RAY

CLICK THE IMAGE BELOW TO BUY BUSTER KEATON: THE COMPLETE SHORTS DIRECT FROM EUREKA

Thanks for reading our review of Buster Keaton Complete Short Films – 1917-1923

For more Movie talk, check out our podcast CINEMA ECLECTICA

Next Post

S13E01 - Sunnycon Special 2016

We return with our 13th series, hurrah! Before we get into some pretty amazing changes, we have a convention special for you lovely lot. We head up to Newcastle to see long time friends Sunnycon, listen in as we discuss the event, its successes and its future with event organiser […]

You Might Like