There was a moment during this gala screening when I
looked along the line to see the faces of my family lit up with smiles. Both
generations had already been laughing at Buster Keaton chased by hundreds of
cops and Charley Chase pursuing a woman he doesn’t know is his wife but then
Charlie Chaplin comes along to offer something more complex: a comedy about poverty, loss and fragile chance.
If Charlie had been set a test to cope with this scenario
without being mawkish… he couldn’t have passed it better. The Kid is a
sentimental film but Chaplin steers perfectly clear of the obvious dangers and
those moments, and there are those moments, when the emotionalism is switched
dangerously high, are handled with exquisite ease. There's a look between mighty
five-year old Jackie Coogan and his surrogate father that is searing and not
soppy. It is the look of a man who knows parental loss and a supernatural
performance from young Jackie.
But then... there is a dream of a dog flying on angel wings as Charlie and his angels fly around the Slums of Heaven with manic abandon. It comes just at the right moment in the film a sequence designed to undermine overt sentimentality. So, right back 'atcha 21
st Century Cynics: this is mad fun and our Charlie
deliberately flies towards the Sun on waxen feather wings but he
doesn’t crash or burn he glides straight to the heart of funny.
I’d never seen The Kid, on purpose, holding off for a
live screening and tonight the Colston Hall, the Bristol Ensemble, ably
conducted by Timothy Brock and the fulsome support of an open-minded and
good-humoured Bristol audience delivered wonderfully well.
If today’s sessions at the Slapstick Festival proved one
thing it is that watching comedy is always – always – better as a group
exercise. Live music creates new connections with the films and a joke shared
is often laughter squared.
In the splendid, care-worn, space of the Colston Hall,
the European Silent Film Ensemble played along to Keaton’s massed Cops (1922) and Charley Chase’ Mighty Like a Moose (1926) – what a
title! Then came the main feature with the Ensemble playing the
UK premier of Charlie’s own score, conducted by Mr Brock.
The most striking thing about the main feature is how
cinematic the writer, director and star’s vision was. The film is told with
supreme economy - a narrative that could be convoluted and strained is
perfectly paced and key moments fall as lightly as feather’s dropped from dog angel’s
wings…
The performance of Coogan is like that of a man four
times his age – his father was on hand to help gear him up for the emotional
moments but he winked at Charlie and told him he knew what he was doing. Edna
Purviance as the mother who gains a career and loses her child, shows just why
Chaplin rated her so highly whilst Chaplin himself is not the focus of the film
you might expect – he’s almost ever-present but is smart enough to under play
and generous enough to let the other leads and some super support actors take
the limelight.
Compere Robin Ince had said he’d once been asked to write
an article on whether Charlie was still funny: his response was that it could
be a very short piece beginning
“Yes…”. Of
course he is, and my family and the two thousand-strong audience proved
it.
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The Colston Hall |
This was my first day at the Slapstick Festival – now in
its 12
th year – and it was a rewarding one – work commitments meant I missed out on the opening day a mistake I won't make next year!
I arrived left foot still hot from the M4, just in time
to see David Robinson’s session on Mack Sennett – a man who made over a
thousand films and who brought so many talented comedians to screen. Robinson
focused on “four and a half” plus a few more…
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Ford Sterling and Mabel Normand |
First up was Mack himself in heavy disguise playing a French
interior designer (of sorts) intent on delivering the eponymous item in D. W.
Griffith’s
A Curtain Pole (1909) – Dutch
Talmadge’s
climactic chariot charge from
Intolerance clearly had its origins here although she never worked out how to
put the horse into reverse.
Then we had marvellous Mabel Normand bouncing her way
through a choice of racers in The Speed
Kings (1913) with “father” Ford Sterling trying to force her to choose his
favourite for some un-specified reason. Everything feels improvised but Sennett
films the - actual – races very well. He learned with DWG at Biograph and knew
how to throw a film together, ad hoc and energised thanks to his dynamic
performers.
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Charlie as a Cop: Ford's not in this one as well?! |
We had the one and only glimpse of Charlie Chaplin as a
Keystone Cop in A Thief Catcher (1914)
again featuring Ford Sterling – David Robinson warned that it wasn’t the best
film but conceded that John Sweeney’s piano improvisations turned it into
something more: audience plus expert live accompaniment equals pure joy!
Don’t Weaken
(1920) again featured Ford Sterling just as I had probably seen enough of the ham
of the hour but this was a different side to Sterling who played a convincingly-graceful
dance teacher trying to impress newly-enriched Charles Murray’s daughter
played by Harriet Hammond. The two men box and Murray is getting pasted until the
Dancing Master is distracted by Harriet’s pins. Way more sophisticated than Benny
Hill.
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Hurry up Harry... |
Finally there was Harry Langdon in
His Marriage Wow (1925) with the deeply-unsettling Vernon Dent as A
Pessimist - Prof. Looney McGlumm trying to dissuade him from marrying Nathalie
Kingston. I’m still haunted by Dent’s soul-sucking stare of disapproval…
Next up was a session on writer Anita Loos from Lucy
Porter who bounded on stage with all the energy of a Mabel Normand clutching a
handful of written notes and Loos’ two autobiographies. Loos played fast and,
er, loose with the facts but was spot-on viscous in her observations on
contemporaries – especially poor Norma Shearer.
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Anita... there's one huge flaw in your argument... |
In her defence, Anita could be just as hard on herself plus
she could write! We watched
The New York Hat (1912) with accompaniment from
harpist, Elizabeth – Jane Baldry who played in complete sympathy with the
emotional cadence of Mary Pickford’s performance – I’ve never been so shocked
by a father’s demolition of a feathered hat.
Then we were treated to the inexplicable The Mystery of the Leaping Fish (1916) written
by Tod Browning with intertitles by Anita Loos. Here again the redemptive power
of a comedy audience was proved as – having previously been a bit Home Counties
about the drug taking, I just saw a
stoner comedy performed with self-depreciating zest by Douglas Fairbanks and Bessie
Love as the little fish blower…
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Coke Ennyday's on the case! |
Only Fairbanks could possibly follow that and so he did
in
Wild and Woolly (1917) written by
Anita Loos and directed by her water-carrying husband-to-be John Emerson and
filmed by some bloke called Victor Fleming.
It is a splendid romp about a rich boy wannabe cowboy who
gets sent out to scope out an investment opportunity for his pa. The western
townsfolk get wind of the greenhorn’s delusions and make like it’s 1880 all
over… Plans are set to entertain his fantasy with a train robbery and an Indian
uprising but soon the fake bullets turn real and, delightfully, Doug turns out
to be just as brave as he wants to be…
Tip of the ten gallon hat to Mr Sweeney – westerns must
be murder on the keyboards with the relentless rhythm of trains and horses always
interrupted by contrapuntal gun fights and saloon brawls!
Then came the evening and the pun-fight at the Colston
Hall…
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Cops on the run |
Buster’s Cops! (1922)
was a massed symphony of un-policed chaos that builds exponentially towards one
of the most existentially bleak comedy climaxes in silent film.
But then what could be more post-structurally challenging
than the battle Charley Chase has with himself in Mighty like a Moose (1926)… one to watch our Charley: a reputation
on the rise!
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The Mooses: Vivien Oakland and Charley Chase |
Superb accompaniment was provided by the European Silent
Screen Virtuosi comprised of Gaunter a Buchwald on piano and violin, Romina Todisco
on double bass and Frank Blockhouse on percussion.
There was also a surprise appearance from St Helen’s favourite
son (sorry Johnny), Bernie Clifton who, in the spirit of Slapstick, not only
showed that comedy is for life and not just Christmas (he’s 79) but also sang
Charlie’s Smile – two minutes in
which the World slowed and Chaplin again reminded us that humour is often the
only hope we have.