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Buster Keaton, der Boxer

Originaltitel: Battling Butler
  • 1926
  • Passed
  • 1 Std. 17 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,0/10
4240
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Buster Keaton in Buster Keaton, der Boxer (1926)
BoxenSlapstickKomödieRomanzeSport

Ein verliebter Schwächling muss vorgeben, ein Boxer zu sein, um den Respekt der Familie des Mädchens zu gewinnen, das er liebt.Ein verliebter Schwächling muss vorgeben, ein Boxer zu sein, um den Respekt der Familie des Mädchens zu gewinnen, das er liebt.Ein verliebter Schwächling muss vorgeben, ein Boxer zu sein, um den Respekt der Familie des Mädchens zu gewinnen, das er liebt.

  • Regie
    • Buster Keaton
  • Drehbuch
    • Paul Gerard Smith
    • Al Boasberg
    • Charles Henry Smith
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Buster Keaton
    • Snitz Edwards
    • Sally O'Neil
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,0/10
    4240
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Buster Keaton
    • Drehbuch
      • Paul Gerard Smith
      • Al Boasberg
      • Charles Henry Smith
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Buster Keaton
      • Snitz Edwards
      • Sally O'Neil
    • 34Benutzerrezensionen
    • 30Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

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    Topbesetzung10

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    Buster Keaton
    Buster Keaton
    • Alfred Butler -posing as Battling Butler
    Snitz Edwards
    Snitz Edwards
    • Alfred's Valet
    Sally O'Neil
    Sally O'Neil
    • The Mountain Girl
    Walter James
    Walter James
    • The Mountain Girl's Father
    Budd Fine
    • The Mountain Girl's Brother
    • (as Bud Fine)
    Francis McDonald
    Francis McDonald
    • Alfred 'Battling' Butler - The Prizefighter
    Mary O'Brien
    • Battling Butler's Wife
    Tom Wilson
    Tom Wilson
    • Battling Butler's Trainer
    Eddie Borden
    Eddie Borden
    • Battling Butler's Manager
    Lillian Lawrence
    • Spinster Aunt at Wedding
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Buster Keaton
    • Drehbuch
      • Paul Gerard Smith
      • Al Boasberg
      • Charles Henry Smith
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen34

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    7SnoopyStyle

    fun time

    Alfred (Buster Keaton) is a weakling from a wealthy family. His father is frustrated with his pampering and sends him on a hunting and fishing trip in the mountains. He brings his butler and all the modern conveniences. It doesn't go well but he does fall in love with a mountain girl whom he almost shoots. Her father and brother ridicule him and refuse to let him marry her until his butler tells them that he is the famous boxer, Alfred "Battling" Butler. The lie quickly gets out of hand.

    While it doesn't have the big stunts, it does have the comedic boxing. At least, Buster gets to show off his physiques. It has his charms. It's a fun second tier Buster. During the big final fight, the real Butler should really push the girl. The idea of her being pushed around should be the driving force for him to rally against him. It's like Popeye getting his spinach. Overall, it's a fun time.
    8slokes

    Snitz Arranges It

    Sybil Seely, Marceline Day, Brown Eyes: All of Buster Keaton's best on-screen partners were female. All but one. Snitz Edwards here plays Buster's faithful valet, a gnomish, gentle character whose eagerness to arrange whatever his master wants lands him in trouble.

    Buster is Alfred Butler, rich and so passive he lets Snitz tap the ash off his cigarette. While on a camping trip, he meets a girl (Sally O'Neil) who strikes his fancy. Her father and brother disapprove of her going off with a "jellyfish." Snitz to the rescue: He tells them this is the same "Battling Butler" who just won the lightweight boxing crown. Alas, the ruse works too well.

    You can argue that Snitz plays the title character here as much as Buster or Francis McDonald, who plays the boxer Butler. Whether laying out a ridiculously ornate table at Buster's camp site or laboring to keep up with his boss during an arduous run through the mud, there's no give-up in the guy.

    "I'd like to marry that pretty little mountain girl" Buster says.

    "Shall I arrange it?" Snitz answers. Buster nods, setting the plot in motion.

    Like a lot of silent comedies, this is a film of pieces. The first half, of Buster and Snitz roughing it in the outdoors, could be a clever short all by itself. Buster's idea of duck-hunting is to row up to one wading in the water, and then lean out of the boat to point a shotgun at it at point-blank range. You expect him to fire and roll off from the gun's kickback, so naturally that's the one thing that doesn't happen.

    The transition to the boxing comedy is well done, helped along by Snitz, McDonald, and O'Neil, really a cutie with her Zooey Deschanel eyes. It's O'Neil's desperate desire to see her man in the ring duking it out that forces Buster and Snitz to scramble in the last half-hour or so, coming up with all sorts of ruses. The comedy wears a bit thin at times with some protracted workout scenes in the boxing ring, yet Buster goes a long way to selling them with his amazingly elastic physicality.

    Buster doesn't wear a porkpie in this film, and his pampered lifestyle distances you a bit more than his inexpressiveness usually did, but he has that dogged quality of classic Keaton heroes. He may not be the champion boxer his girl thinks he is, but he'll not give her up without a fight. "I'm going back and tell her the truth," he tells Snitz. "I'd rather lose her that way."

    It's funny how "Battling Butler" doesn't really engage a lot of Keaton fans. Perhaps there's some resentment there because it was a hit for Buster right before "The General" flopped. Taken on its own merits, "Battling Butler" is a clever and engaging comedy with a likeably different lead role for Buster and a surprising double-twist ending, in which Buster (and the audience) have the wool lifted from their eyes one minute, only for Buster to do the same with us the next.

    Maybe "Battling Butler" isn't as inventive as Keaton fans are used to, but it has its share of arresting visuals and a solid mix of varied comedic moments that still connect. Plus it works as a story all the way through. Finally there's the winning chemistry of Buster and Snitz, The Great Stoneface and The Great Cragface.
    7HotToastyRag

    Buster's a boxer!

    In 1926, before the world knew what Buster Keaton sounded like when he talked, he played a rich, spoiled dandy in Battling Butler. While "camping" on his own in the forest, his valet takes care of his every need, including hot meals, dressing him for dinner, and drawing his bath. Buster sees Sally O'Neil and sends his valet, Snitz Edwards, to propose for him and arrange the marriage. Sally's family think Buster is a weakling, but to impress them, Snitz lies and says Buster is actually "Battling" Butler, a prizefighter with the same name.

    For the rest of the movie, Buster is caught up in the lie he didn't even tell. He pretends to be the boxer, and even switches places with him and prepares to fight in the ring! There are some pretty cute scenes and jokes, as well as some very entertaining boxing scenes. Even though he comes across as a weakling at the start of the movie, we all know that he's going to show off and use his muscles when he gets into his boxing shorts. This isn't the movie to watch if you're looking for death-defying stunts, but if you liked Danny Kaye's reluctant character in The Kid from Brooklyn, you'll probably love this one.
    9Igenlode Wordsmith

    A knock-down success

    Neither the prospect of eighty minutes of biting headwind nor snow showers has been able to keep me from the National Film Theatre over the three weeks so far of its Buster Keaton season, and every time the films have yet to disappoint: "Battling Butler" is no exception! I'd instantly give this a 9 if only I could justify it relative to the early scenes; despite the pitch of enthusiasm I'd reached by the end of the film, I'm still not quite sure in all fairness that I can.

    It definitely takes a while to get up to speed (at the start, I took the father to be a doctor giving his sickly son only three months to live!) and for the initial reel or so it depends largely on a single extended gag -- the elegant fop's complete unsuitability for an outdoor environment. Alfred's elaborate al-fresco living arrangements echo Keaton's trademark fascination with complicated contrivances, and there's one very typical bit of misdirection where we wait for the shotgun's recoil to knock Alfred backwards into the water, only for a somewhat different turn of events to prove his downfall; but this film doesn't come properly to life until its hero engages our sympathy as well as being a walking joke. In "The General", we engage with Johnnie Gray almost immediately -- in "Battling Butler", Alfred remained a cipher for me until the moment when he nervously rehearses "Beatrice Faircatch"'s newspaper advice on making a proposal, with such an earnest air: it's funny, but it's also touching, and it's no coincidence that it is with his subsequent first steps towards standing on his own two feet -- tearing up and throwing aside the useless newspaper column -- that Alfred Butler may finally be said to have progressed beyond a simple one-dimensional character, and the film can really begin.

    From here on the picture becomes a Keaton classic, sweeping the hapless hero further and further from the cushioned normality of his life with a series of escalating and plausible coincidences. Ultimately the worm will turn, of course -- but not in the time and manner that we are expecting. And Keaton acts here not just with that famous face but with every line of his whole body: triumph, exhaustion, despair, apprehension, indignation, timidity, pugnacity... and finally, in the last scene, sublime confidence in his own skin, modelling a costume so incongruous that only Buster Keaton could carry it off with such genuine elegance!

    The scenes of Alfred's ordeal are hilarious and moving by degrees -- it's almost impossible to analyse Keaton's appeal. 'Sweet' is quite definitely the wrong word, as is 'lovable': Buster is no Little Tramp. 'Bittersweet' might be closer to the mark... or 'poignant'; the metaphor of the man who gets knocked down but keeps on trying has never been more apt. There is a brief vivid moment when Alfred, bewildered and worn out, turns his face aside into the arms of his second with such a hopeless little air that instead of a laugh, it raised a murmur of pity from the auditorium. But Keaton never allows himself to milk the audience for sympathy -- the best of his films may mingle laughter through tears, but he never falls into the trap of sentimentality.

    I'm not sure if this is among the best of Keaton's films... but it's certainly one of those I've ultimately enjoyed the most so far. I've changed my mind: I'll give it a 9 after all, and say I'm dropping a mark down instead from a 10! :-)
    7SAMTHEBESTEST

    Buster Keaton hits all the punches right without even entering the boxing ring.

    Battling Butler (1926) : Brief Review -

    Buster Keaton hits all the punches right without even entering the boxing ring. This feels like an another influential stuff from Keaton which might not have been remade or adapted as it is but surely has inspired many comedy and rom-com films over the years. A love-struck weakling must pretend to be boxer in order to gain respect from the family of the girl he loves which takes him to fight the real boxing match. Battling Butler, the title refers to two personalities in the film of the same name getting mixed up. So, it creates that certain types of laughing situations which will leave you with enough gags. Although, it isn't completely hilarious, Battling Butler is more about comic situations than comedy scenes. Some of the one liners (intertitles i mean) are too good, see one says this, "Do you think you could learn to love me?" And she says, "I have." And he tores the paper apart. I don't know why those so many rom-coms of talkies era didn't use this line ever? Buster Keaton as the Battling Butler is in top form like always. Not just physical comedy but he performs some difficult stunts also and that too without fumbling. Snitz Edwards as his Valet is typically funny while gorgeous Sally O'Neil as his love interest plays the part fine. Keaton had already made Cult comedies like 'Our Hospitality', "Sherlock Jr.', 'The Genral' and other which had lot of mind-blowing adventurous stuff and Battling Butler doesn't match those films. Nevertheless, it is a great entertainner anyday. The short runtime helps it to remain engaging throughout without leaving any loops and boring moments. The best part is, those boxing sequences are damn funny which highlights some major comedy skills of Keaton. Overall, another fine comedy by King Of Comedy.

    RATING - 7/10*

    By - #samthebestest.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The close-up of Alfred Butler's hands as he opens the box with the wedding ring inside was shot with a hand double, since Buster Keaton was missing the tip of his right index finger.
    • Patzer
      The date on the hotel register when Battling Butler signs it is four days earlier than the date when Alfred signs it directly under Battling Butler's signature a few hours later that same day (November 2nd vs November 6th).
    • Zitate

      Alfred's Valet: [to the Mountain Girl] Mr. Butler would like to marry you.

      The Mountain Girl's Brother: That jellyfish couldn't take care of himself - let alone a wife.

      The Moutain Girl's Father: We don't want any weaklings in our family.

    • Crazy Credits
      The "THE END" test is shown on a boxing bell.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Sports on the Silver Screen (1997)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Battling Butler?
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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 11. März 1927 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Noon
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Buster Keaton, der Killer von Alabama
    • Drehorte
      • Talmadge Apartments - 3278 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(mansion)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Buster Keaton Productions
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 702.114 $
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 17 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Silent
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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