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Harold, halt dich fest!

Originaltitel: Feet First
  • 1930
  • Passed
  • 1 Std. 33 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
1251
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Harold Lloyd in Harold, halt dich fest! (1930)
AbenteuerFamilieKomödieRomanze

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAn ambitious shoe salesman who unknowingly meets his boss's daughter and tells her he is a leather tycoon has to try to hide his true circumstances.An ambitious shoe salesman who unknowingly meets his boss's daughter and tells her he is a leather tycoon has to try to hide his true circumstances.An ambitious shoe salesman who unknowingly meets his boss's daughter and tells her he is a leather tycoon has to try to hide his true circumstances.

  • Regie
    • Clyde Bruckman
    • Harold Lloyd
  • Drehbuch
    • John Grey
    • Alfred A. Cohn
    • Clyde Bruckman
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Harold Lloyd
    • Barbara Kent
    • Robert McWade
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,7/10
    1251
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Clyde Bruckman
      • Harold Lloyd
    • Drehbuch
      • John Grey
      • Alfred A. Cohn
      • Clyde Bruckman
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Harold Lloyd
      • Barbara Kent
      • Robert McWade
    • 26Benutzerrezensionen
    • 10Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 wins total

    Fotos40

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    Topbesetzung15

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    Harold Lloyd
    Harold Lloyd
    • Harold Horne
    Barbara Kent
    Barbara Kent
    • Barbara
    Robert McWade
    Robert McWade
    • John Quincy Tanner
    Lillian Leighton
    Lillian Leighton
    • Mrs. Tanner
    • (as Lillianne Leighton)
    Henry Hall
    Henry Hall
    • Mr. Endicott
    Noah Young
    Noah Young
    • Sailor
    Alec B. Francis
    Alec B. Francis
    • Mr. Carson
    • (as Alec Francis)
    Arthur Housman
    Arthur Housman
    • Drunken Clubman
    Willie Best
    Willie Best
    • Charcoal - Janitor
    • (as Sleep 'n' Eat)
    Nick Copeland
    • Man Arguing with Friend
    • (Nicht genannt)
    James Finlayson
    James Finlayson
    • Painter
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Sydney Jarvis
    • Window Dresser
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Buster Phelps
    Buster Phelps
    • Little Boy
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Paul Gerard Smith
    • Seasick Passenger
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Leo Willis
    Leo Willis
    • Truck Driver
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Clyde Bruckman
      • Harold Lloyd
    • Drehbuch
      • John Grey
      • Alfred A. Cohn
      • Clyde Bruckman
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen26

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    bensonj

    A GREAT COMEDY, IN NO SENSE A REMAKE

    I first saw the finale of this film in the compilation, HAROLD LLOYD'S WORLD OF COMEDY, in 1962, in a jam-packed 800-seat theatre. The audience roared and ROARED with laughter and excitement. It was the funniest, most thrilling thing I had ever seen in movies (I was 21) and I never forgot it.

    What surprised me when I finally saw the whole of FEET FIRST recently, after seeing nearly all of Lloyd's silents (including SAFETY LAST) in the intervening period, is not only how well the final building-climbing sequence still holds up, but how inventive and funny the entire film is. There's a long sequence of Harold as a shoe salesman that's as hilarious and creative as anything in his silents, and there are just no dull spots at all.

    The final long sequence on the side of a building is in NO WAY just a rehash of the SAFETY LAST sequence. I doubt if there's a single gag in it that repeats anything in the earlier film. It's every bit as imaginative and hair-raising as SAFETY LAST, a real tour de force. The bumbling Willie Best is a bothersome racial caricature, certainly, yet in terms of comedy, his "unflappable" casual unconcern is a perfect foil for Lloyd's kinetic, action-filled, dangerous gags, and he has one of the funniest lines in the picture.

    Keaton and Laurel & Hardy (in their features) lost creative control of their work in the sound era, Langdon never made a starring-vehicle sound film, and Chaplin didn't make a talking film until 1940. Lloyd's sound films were not so successful at the box office, and a reasonable assumption would be that they, too, lacked whatever mysterious element had made the silent comedians great. In the case of Lloyd, at least as regards to his three pre-Code era films designed for sound, this is dead wrong! FEET FIRST, MOVIE CRAZY, and THE CAT'S PAW are all top-notch comedies (and his three films that came after them aren't bad either).

    As with all of Lloyd, this is best seen with an audience, but even on TV it's a funny, funny film.
    5JoeytheBrit

    Deja Vu

    Lloyd's career, like that of Keaton's, was irreparably damaged by the advent of sound, and this film is a fairly good example of why he failed to survive the transition. While the physical comedy is as funny as it was in his silent movies, the verbal comedy is, for Lloyd, one almighty pratfall. He clearly realised he needed something to amend for this shortcoming and, with a hint of desperation, harked backed to Safety Last (1923), one of his greatest silent films, by repeating the entire scaling the outside of a skyscraper sequence.

    Lloyd plays a lowly shoe salesman who falls for a woman he believes is the daughter of the wealthy owner of the shoe store he works for but who is actually his secretary. Lloyd inadvertently manages to end up as a stowaway on the boat which his beloved and her boss are travelling and attempts to pass himself off as a wealthy young businessman while trying to avoid the ship's crew.

    For most of the film the laughs are pretty strained. To be fair the film isn't particularly bad, but it falls so far below Lloyd's previous standards that you end up believing that it is. The finale in this film is almost as thrilling as the one in Safety Last, but it's just a repeat (without a musical score) and it smacks of desperation on the part of both Lloyd and his studio.
    6Doylenf

    Lloyd's misadventures include the amazing building routine...

    This is one of Lloyd's first talkies and might have played better as a silent, since most of the action revolves around a whole bunch of amusing sight gags.

    He's a hapless shoe salesman who tells a wealthy girl that he's a tycoon and spends the rest of the film trying to impress her after unable to leave a cruise ship before it takes off. All of the shipboard scenes are amusing but become repetitious after the first twenty minutes. Highlight of the humor is Lloyd's interaction with sailor Noah Young, adept at playing a dummy.

    Silly plot manipulations end up with Lloyd getting stuck inside a mailbag and somehow hoisted up the side of a building on a flimsy scaffold. It's here that the film reminds one of the silent success he had with his skyscraper routine. Although the gags are inventive and foolish enough, it's an extended sequence that plays out over too much running time. WILLIE BEST is seen as a black maintenance man who's no help at all to Lloyd when he becomes aware of his plight. It's the kind of stereotyped role that makes today's politically correct audiences squirm.

    Summing up: Funny in spots, but certainly not one of Lloyd's best efforts. The scaffolding gags look painfully real.
    7I_Ailurophile

    Enjoyable, albeit lacking the necessary vitality to really make it stick

    While he lacks the same name recognition among general audiences as some of his contemporaries, Harold Lloyd was a shining star of the silent era, a comedian handily matching Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin with his funny antics. With stunts and effects aplenty, his pictures earned big laughs with abundant gags and situational humor, not to mention some witty dialogue (imparted through intertitles), fun character dynamics, and even some physical comedy adjoining the lighthearted silliness. Lloyd's first foray into sound films was less successful, however, for reasons that had nothing to do with audio; the writing in 1929's 'Welcome danger' felt too much like a mishmash, stepping away from the man's strengths, and it came off as the least Harold Lloyd of any Harold Lloyd vehicle up to that point. What then of his second sound film, which further reunites Lloyd with returning director Clyde Bruckman, and co-stars including Barbara Kent and Noah Young? For as much as I've loved all of Lloyd's silent works, after this title's immediate predecessor I sat to watch with expectations that had been substantially lowered. The good news is that 'Feet first' is pleasant and charming, and certainly earns some laughs, with no small amount of cleverness. Happily, it's also surely more consistent than the last effort.

    The bad news is that the humor in this feature is too often very extra light - albeit also punctuated with instances of a somewhat off-putting mean streak. In a runtime of ninety-some minutes, much of the first third doesn't make much of an impression, and thereafter the writing continues to be highly variable; too many bits feel tired, as if the writers were really stretching and straining to whip up good ideas. This applies equally to the narrative, scene writing, characters, and dialogue: clever at many points, yes, but meager at others, and too often lacking the vitality that would help a moment to really stick and have the desired impact. In the same measure that 'Welcome danger' felt too much unlike a Harold Lloyd movie in its amalgamation of crime, drama, and adventure with the comedy, 'Feet first' feels at times too much like a softer, lesser creation, failing to achieve the same vibrancy as its silent predecessors no matter how boisterous the actors are, or how much they run around. This is enjoyable, but in a way that more tends to more closely resemble a warm, gentle spring breeze, sometimes blowing hotter more like the middle of summer, than an invigorating shot in the arm. Case in point: the picture's biggest stunt, recalling Lloyd's most famous scene in 1923's 'Safety last!', is also the only significant one here.

    I do actually like this. It's entertaining, and it's well made, with fine contributions from most everyone on hand, including the cast. The sad fact of the matter is that this flick struggles to capture the imagination in the same way as anything the star made preceding the advent of talkies - 'Why worry?', 'Dr. Jack,' 'Hot water,' and so on. It holds up better than the man's first sound feature, but I only wish that it were more robust, with the same energy and wit that defined the best of Lloyd's oeuvre, for even the last act has a had time matching up despite the obvious kinship. (Please also note a single, casually racist line that hasn't aged well. Lloyd himself accordingly dubbed over that line for a subsequent re-release, which speaks well to him sensibilities, but it's there nonetheless.) While this is worth watching on its own merits, with swell ideas through to the end, I would strongly suggest prioritizing Lloyd's silent offerings. Those are must-see classics; this is something less remarkable to be saved for a lazy day. 'Feet first' deserves your viewership, but ironically, it shouldn't be first.
    Snow Leopard

    Good Low-Key Comedy With a Throwback Finale

    This Harold Lloyd feature provides good low-key comedy, capped off with a lengthy finale that is very much in the style of a throwback to the finale of Lloyd's "Safety Last" and other silent classics. Lloyd has the kind of role that allows him to use most of his range of comic talents, and the story sets up plenty of predicaments for his character to try to wriggle out of.

    The story has Lloyd as an ambitious but rather hapless shoe salesman, who tries to pass himself off as someone important in order to impress a young woman. It's familiar territory for Lloyd, but the story adds plenty of good material that makes the character again and again scramble for ways out of a continual series of problems.

    The finale has Lloyd's character getting caught on the outside of a tall building, and desperately trying to get to safety. It contains a number of imaginative details and obstacles to add to the suspense and humor. The only drawback is the heavily stereotyped character played by Willie Best, which distracts your attention away from the good comedy material. That's nothing at all against Best, who was a talented comedic actor who simply took the roles that were available to him, and who would have succeeded if he'd been given the chance to do more.

    Overall, though, it's a solid comedy, and one that allows Lloyd to do many of the things that made him so popular.

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      "Feet First" was the sixth most popular movie at the U.S box office for 1930.
    • Patzer
      During his climb up the side of a skyscraper, Harold gets off a painter's trolley onto a closed window awning, which his weight opens up leaving him hanging from the edge. He climbs onto the top of the awning and finds the bottom of a rope from a painters cradle. It is just level with the top of the awning in long shot, but then in a close up it's then seen near the bottom of the awning, then at the original length in a long shot. The awning collapses leaving Harold clinging onto the window sill he then starts to climb up the rope to the next window, but suddenly the rope disappears for an instant and then its back.
    • Zitate

      Harold Horne: I was just practicing to be a salesman, Mr. Endicott.

      Mr. Endicott: You'll never make a salesman. Salesmanship is 98% personality and that's something you haven't got.

      Harold Horne: Oh, yes I have! Look!

      Mr. Endicott: Aw, that's not personality. That's stupidity!

    • Alternative Versionen
      Television prints are edited for content purposes, eliminating some racist ethnic humor. The uncensored version is only available through the Harold Lloyd Trust.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Harold Lloyd - Selten so gelacht (1962)
    • Soundtracks
      Aloha Oe
      (1908) (uncredited)

      Music by Queen Liliuokalani

      Played by a band as the ship leaves the Honolulu harbor

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 9. Juni 1931 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Feet First
    • Drehorte
      • Metropolitan Studios - 1040 N. Las Palmas Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • The Harold Lloyd Corporation
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 647.000 $ (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 33 Min.(93 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.20 : 1

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