Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaBoy trying to impress girl, gets chased by her father and the police right into an ongoing marathon.Boy trying to impress girl, gets chased by her father and the police right into an ongoing marathon.Boy trying to impress girl, gets chased by her father and the police right into an ongoing marathon.
'Snub' Pollard
- Snub
- (as Harry Pollard)
James Fitzgerald
- Marathon runner
- (não creditado)
Wally Howe
- Marathon Runner
- (não creditado)
Bud Jamison
- The Rich Girl's Father
- (não creditado)
Dee Lampton
- Woman in blackface
- (não creditado)
Gus Leonard
- The Butler
- (não creditado)
Gaylord Lloyd
- The Chief of Police
- (não creditado)
Marie Mosquini
- The Waitress
- (não creditado)
Molly Thompson
- Woman at panic
- (não creditado)
Dorothea Wolbert
- The Rich Girl's Mother
- (não creditado)
Noah Young
- A Suitor
- (não creditado)
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesA print of this film has been preserved by the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York.
- Citações
Title Card: The Father - Retired heavyweight boxer - was never knocked out in less than one round.
- ConexõesFeatured in How Mirror Scenes Are Shot in Movies & TV (2022)
Avaliação em destaque
Boy (Harold Lloyd), trying to impress girl, gets chased by her father and the police right into an ongoing marathon.
Although many of Harold Lloyd's films around 1920 were directed by Hal Roach, this one has the distinction of coming from a different man: Australian-born American film director Alfred J. Goulding, who also worked with Laurel and Hardy.
There are plenty of gags in this one, including the use of a midget, a small dog, and an impressive mirror joke. Whether the mirror was originated here or not I do not know, but it has been repeated countless times since, most often in cartoons. (Lloyd's comedy could probably be favorably compared to a cartoon.) One website says the definitive version of the joke is in 1933 Marx Brothers film "Duck Soup", who got it from vaudeville... but who first put it on screen?
Although many of Harold Lloyd's films around 1920 were directed by Hal Roach, this one has the distinction of coming from a different man: Australian-born American film director Alfred J. Goulding, who also worked with Laurel and Hardy.
There are plenty of gags in this one, including the use of a midget, a small dog, and an impressive mirror joke. Whether the mirror was originated here or not I do not know, but it has been repeated countless times since, most often in cartoons. (Lloyd's comedy could probably be favorably compared to a cartoon.) One website says the definitive version of the joke is in 1933 Marx Brothers film "Duck Soup", who got it from vaudeville... but who first put it on screen?
- gavin6942
- 19 de mai. de 2014
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- Tempo de duração10 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.33 : 1
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