One of the silent movie blogs I'm following made me (once again) aware of Harry Langdon. There are people who put him in one group with Chaplin, Keaton, and Lloyd as one of the big four comedians of that time.
I hadn't watched anything with Langdon yet, so I very randomly picked a movie called "Long Pants" (also known as "Johnny Newcomer") from 1927.
Here's the plot (with spoilers as you know).
Despite being a grown-up, Harry Shelby still isn't allowed by his mother to wear long pants. His only romantic experiences are from library books and dreams.
Then his father gives him his first pair of long pants and Harry's life changes completely.
While his parents expect him to marry his childhood friend Priscilla, Harry spots femme fatale Bebe Blair whose car has broken down. Bebe kisses him jokingly and after she's gone, Harry finds a note - obviously not meant for him - saying "I'll be back to marry you".
As Bebe doesn't come back, Harry's and Priscilla's wedding day has come instead. That day, Harry reads in the newspaper that "snow smuggler" Bebe is in the city jail and he makes the quick decision to help her escape. First he needs to get rid of Priscilla, though, and takes her to the woods to shoot her.
The plan goes utterly wrong and when Priscilla finds the gun and takes a few practice shots at a target she has pinned on a tree, Harry gets scared and runs off to the city.
Bebe has already managed to escape and Harry helps her to hide in a packing crate which he carries off.
After a few adventures with a policeman and an alligator, Bebe asks him to share her life of crime.
When they go to a club so Bebe can settle scores with the singer and dancer who took her husband, though, things go very wrong. Bebe and her husband shoot each other and Harry gets trampled in the stampede of curious people, so he goes back home and is happily welcomed back by Priscilla and his parents.
Well, people. You may wonder now, but this really is supposed to be a comedy. I mean I have nothing against black humor at all, but this one left me a bit speechless. My first thought was that I shouldn't have picked a random Langdon movie, but should have checked for beginner's choices first.
According to a film historian, even Buster Keaton, who was a fan of Langdon's, thought the scene in the woods was going too far.
And it seems that there was also a fallout between Langdon and Frank Capra who directed the film because it was too dark. I say "seems" because I'm still completely clueless about the different angles and point of views about that. In a quick browse I found different opinions, so I'm not going to touch that topic (yet?).
All I got so far is that some see Langdon as a comedic genius albeit an acquired taste and others say they simply "can't get into him".
If I were quick to judge from just one movie, I would be part of the second group. There were some funny scenes, for example when Harry thinks Bebe is nudging him through the hole in the packing crate although it's the alligator.
All in all, however, I thought that almost an hour was quite long for something that - may Langdon fans forgive me - didn't impress me much as a comedy.
Nevertheless, I can't judge from this movie alone, so the next time I'll check for recommendations first, and who knows, maybe he'll become an acquired taste for me, too.




































