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The Scarecrow

United States

1920

19 Min
Black and White
1.33:1
Silent
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Buster Keaton, Edward F. Cline

PROD Joseph M. Schenck

SCR Buster Keaton, Edward F. Cline

DP Elgin Lessley

CAST Buster Keaton, Sybil Seely, Joe Keaton, Joe Roberts

ED Buster Keaton

Berlinale (Retrospective)

Director

Original

Buster Keaton

Joseph Frank Keaton was born on October 4, 1895, to a pair of vaudeville performers. Spending his childhood on the road with his family, he earned the nickname Buster at the age of six months. By the age of three, the youngster was appearing as part of his parents act whenever they could evade child labor laws. In vaudeville, Keaton developed remarkable talents as an acrobatic comedian with a superb sense of timing, and became a rising star by his teens. In early 1917, Buster left his act with his parents, and appeared in a Broadway comic revue later that year, but the key to Keaton’s future came when he met a fellow vaudeville comedian. Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle was starring in a low-budget two-reel screen comedy, The Butcher Boy, and invited Keaton to play a small role in the picture. The two hit it off and became a successful onscreen team, starring in a long string of comic hits. Fascinated by the medium of film, Keaton soon began writing their pictures, and assisted in directing… read more

Original

Edward F. Cline

Entering films as one of Mack Sennett’s Keystone Cops in 1913, Cline began assisting Sennett and by 1916 was directing shorts at Keystone. In the early ‘20s he co-wrote and co-directed seventeen of Buster Keaton’s shorts, including such classics as The Playhouse, The Boat, and Cops, as well as Keaton’s first feature, the Intolerance-parody The Three Ages. Later in the decade he was reunited with Sennett when he directed two-reelers for such comics as Ben Turpin and Carole Lombard. In 1932 Cline directed W.C. Fields in the memorable satire Million Dollar Legs and became one of the few directors whom the irascible comedian could tolerate. Called in to helm most of Fields’ scenes in You Can’t Cheat an Honest Man (signed by George Marshall), Cline went on to direct the classic features that capped Fields’ career in the early ‘40s: My Little Chickadee (co-starring Mae West), The Bank Dick, and Never Give a Sucker an Even Break. Cline’s last important work was with Olsen and Johnson on Crazy… read more

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Displaying 4 of 9 wall posts.
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AKFilmFan

21Mar13

Simple and hilarious film that shows the inventiveness that Keaton would later develop even further in The Navigator with it's use of Goldberg devices.

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Electrus Amadeus Magnus

15Mar13

Rube Goldberg stuff!

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Trolley Freak

28Nov12

Keaton made so many great films in both the short and feature format it's perhaps inevitable that a few of them get overlooked. This unpretentious short is a case in point. It's a delight from start to finish, a fast paced gagfest in which The Great Stone Face and his housemate vie for the affections of a farmer's daughter. Interestingly the farmer is played by Joe Keaton, none other than Buster's real life father...

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CarlosEsquives

21Aug12

Buster y el perro; sin duda la mejor escena

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