Asides

Something to watch tonight: Tuesday 23 April

By April 23, 2024No Comments

Sherlock Jr. (Keaton, 1924)

Guests at the recent TCM Classic Film Festival in Hollywood had the usu­al riches to choose from – includ­ing a red car­pet cel­eb­ra­tion of the 30th anniversary of Pulp Fiction – but a high­light must have been the cen­ten­ary screen­ing Buster Keaton’s Sherlock Jr.

Like the Beatles versus the Stones, film fans have to choose between Chaplin and Keaton as their favour­ite silent comedi­an. It’s just a cinephile rule.

I’m a Keaton man, me. I’ve always found Chaplin to be too sen­ti­ment­al, too ingra­ti­at­ing, des­pite the evid­ent phys­ic­al prowess.

Thanks to film fest­iv­al ‘live cinema’ screen­ings, I had pre­vi­ously seen The General, Steamboat Bill, Jr. and The Cameraman but, apart from high­light reel clips, I’d nev­er seen Keaton’s 1924 mas­ter­piece Sherlock Jr. until last night.

Keaton plays a cinema pro­jec­tion­ist who dreams of becom­ing a detect­ive. The object of his affec­tion (Kathryn McGuire) has her head turned by a smooth crim­in­al (Ward Crane) who, thanks to a stolen pock­et watch and a loc­al pawn­broker, can woo her with a three dol­lar box of chocolates.

Keaton’s lovelorn Projectionist is framed for the theft and attempts .

Back at work, he falls asleep in the bio box and dreams of becom­ing detect­ive Sherlock Jr, inside the film itself, the great hero of his own story.

It’s an old film, so there are old jokes. Keaton slips on a banana skin in the first five minutes. But you can also see the geni­us invent­ing screen com­edy in front of your eyes. He uses the tech­no­logy – edit­ing, per­spect­ive, light­ing, optic­al effects – along­side his vaudevil­lian exper­i­ence and his phys­ic­al fear­less­ness, to pro­duce jaw-dropping moments, one after the other.

The stunts are astound­ing, but it is the aplomb with which Keaton car­ries them off that make them great cinema, as opposed to just … stunts, I guess.

Credit should be giv­en to the sup­port­ing cast, espe­cially the boun­ti­fully mous­ta­chioed Crane who more than holds his own in the phys­ic­al com­edy depart­ment. He died of pneu­mo­nia four years later, at the age of only 38.

But it’s Keaton’s geni­us that we are all here to see, a geni­us as a dir­ect­or as well as a performer.


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Where to watch Sherlock Jr.*

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

*Sherlock Jr. is out of copy­right so you’ll find quite a few cop­ies, of excel­lent qual­ity I must say, on YouTube. There are also cop­ies on Kanopy, Tubi, and oth­er stream­ers that have access to pub­lic domain movies.