8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
For fans - *****; for others ***, September 10, 2008
Fans of W.C. will love watching this silent movie which features alot of material which turned up in his later 2-reelers and features. His talent as a mime is widely apparent in this somewhat overlong, and occasionally disjointed affair.
Mr. Prettywillie, the Druggist of the small midwestern town, can't seem to get any rest. When he's not woken up by an hysterical high-society lady (played well by Dale Fuller, the triple-jointed "patient" in The Dentist; she shows up later on, apprently exhausted by the walk to the mailbox, and it seems her dress refuses to stay in place, and she transforms from the upper crust socialite to the flapper) who must have have a single stamp right now, or by a neighbor's infant just doing what an infant will do, or by various delivery men who dare to make a sound while Fields sleeps on a hammock on the backporch, he's beleaguered by the normal walk-in traffic, who have an eye on Louise Brooks, the pretty assistant who falls for a Real Estate man with a surefire plan.
He's even tormented at a distance by the Aunt of Louise, who cannot contain her crush on her neice's employer; he must feign appreciation as a courtesy to his employee.
There's a very long scene with Fields and co. picnicing on the lawn of a great estate - Fields does some wonderful pantomine but the whole segment could have been excised for a two-reeler. Also, it has no bearing on the plot at all.
The soundtrack was performed and recorded live and some of the non-musical ambience bleeds through.
This reasonably priced DVD is a great companion to the rare "You're Telling Me", from 1934.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Through Fields & Brooks, June 24, 2011
This is a good transfer. The quality is very good... much better than I expected. As much as I enjoy ALL the performances throughout, I (of course) always find myself impatiently waiting for another glimpse at the young QUEEN of silent films. Allow me to take that one step further. For me, Miss Brooks is the All-time Queen of Cinema... and there can be only ONE.
Fans of silents and Lulu will go wild for this treasure.
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