Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Classic Film Comedy Short Stories #12

It's been a while since I have done one of these. So a quick reminder this is a mixture of trivia and short stories about classic film comedy (1912.-1955). This was inspired by the Animation Antidotes posts on Cartoon research.com to give credit where credit is due.

French cinema and stage legend Sacha Guitry made only one published novel. This novel was adapted by Guiltry himself into his most popular film, The Story of a Cheat (1936). Most of his films were based off his own plays. Another exception to this is his film The Pearls of the Crown (1937). That film was his only story originally written (by himself) to be a movie. Both are fantastic films I highly recommend.





Director Chuck Jones had a set of rules for the coyote and roadrunner cartoons to follow (Roadrunner must stay on the road, No dialogue beyond "Beep Beep", the roadrunner must never hurt the coyote, etc.). However his main writer Michael Maltese was unaware of such rules. Coyote and roadrunner cartoons were the easiest cartoons to make for them, and therefore where often used to fill time when another cartoon was taking a longer time.

Laurel and Hardy made foreign language versions of their own films, by reading the words written phonetically off-screen. Some of these were in fact longer than the original English language version (with extra scenes added) and some combined multiple shorts together. Though it is often written that Pardon Us was the team's first feature (it was their first English language one) the first of their films to reach feature length (at least that I'm aware of) was Noche De Duendes (1930), a Spanish language version of The Laurel and Hardy Murder Case (1930) with scenes from Berthmarks added. This film was 49 minutes, and a feature is any film over 40 minutes.

When working on the film The Kid (1921), Charlie Chaplin would take Jackie Coogan (who played the title character) to an amusement park, for pony rides or whatever every Sunday. The two remained close for many years.

-Michael J. Ruhland         

No comments:

Post a Comment