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Our Hospitality

  • 1923
  • Passed
  • 1h 5min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.7/10
13 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Buster Keaton, Buster Keaton Jr., Joe Keaton, and Natalie Talmadge in Our Hospitality (1923)
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Reproducir trailer2:18
1 video
51 fotos
Comedia románticaComediaRomanceThriller

Un hombre regresa a su granja en los Apalaches. En el viaje, se enamora de una mujer joven. El único problema es que su familia ha prometido matar a todos los miembros de su familia.Un hombre regresa a su granja en los Apalaches. En el viaje, se enamora de una mujer joven. El único problema es que su familia ha prometido matar a todos los miembros de su familia.Un hombre regresa a su granja en los Apalaches. En el viaje, se enamora de una mujer joven. El único problema es que su familia ha prometido matar a todos los miembros de su familia.

  • Dirección
    • John G. Blystone
    • Buster Keaton
  • Guionistas
    • Jean C. Havez
    • Clyde Bruckman
    • Joseph A. Mitchell
  • Elenco
    • Buster Keaton
    • Natalie Talmadge
    • Joe Keaton
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.7/10
    13 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • John G. Blystone
      • Buster Keaton
    • Guionistas
      • Jean C. Havez
      • Clyde Bruckman
      • Joseph A. Mitchell
    • Elenco
      • Buster Keaton
      • Natalie Talmadge
      • Joe Keaton
    • 81Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 57Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 nominación en total

    Videos1

    Our Hospitality
    Trailer 2:18
    Our Hospitality

    Fotos51

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    Elenco principal16

    Editar
    Buster Keaton
    Buster Keaton
    • Willie McKay - 21 Years Old
    Natalie Talmadge
    Natalie Talmadge
    • Virginia Canfield
    Joe Keaton
    Joe Keaton
    • The Engineer
    Joe Roberts
    Joe Roberts
    • Joseph Canfield
    Francis X. Bushman Jr.
    Francis X. Bushman Jr.
    • Canfield's 1st Son
    • (as Ralph Bushman)
    Monte Collins
    Monte Collins
    • The Parson
    Craig Ward
    Craig Ward
    • Canfield's 2nd Son
    Kitty Bradbury
    • The Aunt
    Buster Keaton Jr.
    Buster Keaton Jr.
    • Willie McKay - 1 Year Old
    Jim Blackwell
    • Canfield's servant
    • (sin créditos)
    Erwin Connelly
    • Husband Quarreling with Wife
    • (sin créditos)
    Edward Coxen
    Edward Coxen
    • John McKay
    • (sin créditos)
    Jack Duffy
    Jack Duffy
    • Sam Gardner
    • (sin créditos)
    Jean Dumas
    • Mrs. McKay
    • (sin créditos)
    Tom London
    Tom London
    • James Canfield
    • (sin créditos)
    George Marion
    • Traffic Policeman
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • John G. Blystone
      • Buster Keaton
    • Guionistas
      • Jean C. Havez
      • Clyde Bruckman
      • Joseph A. Mitchell
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios81

    7.713.1K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8Stablemate

    Great End Part, Otherwise Uneven

    Although not Keaton's greatest film, this one has sure got some really great moments. The build-up is rather slow while the main plot is being established: 1830s Kentucky. Keaton gets invited by a pretty girl to attend her family dinner. What he doesn't realize until too late is that the family in question is his inherited mortal enemies in a blood feud that has been going on for centuries. The girl's father and brothers all want to kill him but is prevented from doing so until he has left their house (hence the title).

    Our Hospitality has got some amazing action sequences but the tempo is very uneven. The early part of the film treats us to some beautiful replicas of old vehicles including trains and bicycles and also some of Keaton's usual train-rail comedy. The middle part, where Keaton guests his blood feud enemies is full of running in and out through doors. Up until now everything has been pretty slow. The last third of the movie though, is truly mind boggling! Keaton and a chasing gunman falls down cliffs, flows down rivers and waterfalls, jumps in and out of moving trains and so on while tied to each other with a rope around their waists. It must have been through watching this James Bond learned his action trade. Our Hospitality however, has also got a lot of comedy in its moments of unbelievable action.

    Good fun.
    7jbrsessums

    Keaton and his stunts.

    Keaton throughout his career did most all of his stunts and even suffered serious injury during the shooting of "The General". During a stunt with a watering tower, Keaton fell hard to the track and broke his neck, but did not know it until 13 years later. Also, during one of the final scenes in "Our Hospitality" when Keaton's character is floating down the river, his safety line broke and he almost drowned, but he was a stickler for not cutting until he said so, because he did not want to miss anything with the camera. Also, during the shooting, the love interest of Keatons character was his wife who was pregnant with their second child, and if you watch closely they attempt to hide her stomach on many occasions. Also, the child at the first that plays the baby Willie, is actually Buster Keaton Jr.
    10imogensara_smith

    A Comedy with a Heart of Gold

    Our Hospitality, Buster Keaton's second feature film, marks a great leap forward in his art. It's his first truly plot-driven film (his first feature, Three Ages, was deliberately made as three connected two-reelers, with only the loosest plot to hold the gags together.) It was also the first in which he banished any hint of cartoon-style slapstick and made gags take a back-seat to narrative. The slower pace and subtler comedy show Keaton's confidence that he didn't need to clown non-stop to retain the audience's interest. The grand scale and period authenticity look forward to his masterpiece, The General. Buster had always had a serious side, but this was the first time it dominated a film. Consequently, Our Hospitality is not his funniest work, but it has a unique sweetness and charm, rich with atmosphere and drama. The elegant historical setting and fresh outdoor scenery add to the handsome effect, and Buster's performance is particularly graceful and sensitive. Like the engineer he would portray in his best-known film, The General, his character here is a very polite, deceptively mild-mannered young man who can turn into a heroic athlete without even changing his clothes.

    Our Hospitality was inspired by the Hatfield-McCoy feud, and the plot involves Buster, as a sheltered young man raised in New York, stumbling into a Southern blood feud when he returns to his ancestral home to claim an inheritance. The joke of the title is that once he enters the home of the rival family, they can't kill him without violating their code of hospitality—until he steps outside! The melodramatic prologue that opens the film comes as a surprise, but it effectively sets up the tension that runs through the story. It's not overplayed, and it includes a cute turn by Buster's infant son, playing the younger incarnation of his own character, Willie McKay. Grown to manhood in New York, Willie is a gentle, foppish type, introduced riding a ludicrous proto-bicycle (accurately based on historical prints of the Gentleman's Hobbyhorse, the first bicycle.) Informed that he has inherited his family's estate, he boards a train for the South.

    Buster's main reason for setting the film in 1830 was so that he could indulge his passion for trains by creating a working model of Stephenson's "Rocket," the first locomotive. The train journey proceeds at a fluid, unhurried pace, blending a string of gags arising from obstacles encountered along the way (donkeys, crafty hillbillies, derailments) with a delicate development of romance between Willie and Virginia Canfield, the young woman sharing his coach. Virginia is played by Natalie Talmadge, Buster's wife at the time. She's pretty and appropriately demure, but it's easy to see why she didn't become a star like her sisters Norma and Constance. She looks nervous and insecure in front of the camera. In addition to featuring Buster's wife, son and father (the lanky, irascible train engineer), Our Hospitality was the swan-song of Big Joe Roberts, who played the "heavy" in almost all of Keaton's early films. Already ill during the making of this film (he died shortly after it was completed), he plays the aged, forgiving patriarch of the Canfield clan.

    The sequence set in the Canfield mansion, where Virginia invites Willie to dinner (not knowing he is the last remnant of the rival McKay clan), is very funny, playing the murderous feud against a stately, antebellum gentility. I love the way all the men keep one eye open during the saying of grace; Willie's frantic efforts to avoid leaving the house; and his attempts to court Virginia while dealing with her gun-wielding brothers. Once he flees the house, the film shifts into high gear. The long chase, making full use of the rugged landscape, is exciting and contains much dashing stunt-work on Buster's part: his fall off a cliff while tied to another man, his ride through the river rapids (he almost drowned due to a mishap making this scene—and it's in the movie!), culminating in the famous waterfall climax. I don't want to give away exactly what happens: I'll never forget the thrill of seeing it for first time, unprepared. But even without the element of surprise, the beauty of this stunt, the pendulum arc he describes with his body, always takes my breath away.

    One final note: contrary to what someone wrote elsewhere on this page, it was not "standard practice" for silent stars to do all their own stunts. Buster Keaton was unique in never using a double, and probably no star ever took greater risks or endured more physical suffering than he did in the interest of his art. But the supreme achievement is how effortless and understated his performances are; he's not showing off, just attending to the task at hand.
    Snow Leopard

    Enjoyable, With Some Especially Good Sequences

    With a good dose of everything that one expects from Keaton - slapstick, stunts, chases, rich visual detail, and much more - "Our Hospitality" is enjoyable to watch, and it has some especially good sequences. The plot idea, with Keaton as an innocent outsider becoming entangled in an old-fashioned family feud, works pretty well, although it relies on comic details to overcome some rather routine characters.

    A short prologue explains the feud in which Buster will soon be involved, and then we see New Yorker Willie McKay (Keaton) called south to claim a family inheritance, which will plunge him into the middle of the feud. One of the movie's highlights is the train ride south, a wonderful sequence that almost upstages the rest of the film. It's a long, leisurely series of comic snippets that works beautifully both as a period piece and as terrifically inventive comedy. There aren't any spectacular gags, but an impressive collection of amusing incidents and carefully done detail, and it's well worth watching over again to catch it all.

    The main part of the film features Buster romancing the pretty young woman he met on the train, while trying to avoid her brothers and father, who are trying to kill him. It's pretty good, but except for a few clever shots most of it is not up to the standard of the first part of the movie. It picks up near the end with a very good chase sequence that has some memorable moments and that brings everything to a climax.

    Overall, this is a fine film, enjoyable and well worth watching.
    8dhoffman

    A parody of the Hatfield-McCoy feud

    There has never been a more comic use of a `train' (if the label is appropriate) than in this film. This is ingenuity at its finest, the most sustained comic sequence I've ever seen. Travelling from New York ca. 1830 to the Appalachians to claim an `estate', Keaton on this journey provides the highlight of the film-and what a highlight it is! From the bouncing actions of passengers to the lifting and moving of track, this series of images is non-stop pleasure. A dog, a hobo, a man throwing rocks at the engineer, a mule-all are inspired catalysts to laughter.

    Once Keaton (a McKay) reaches his destination, the movie changes pace. And despite many good moments, especially those when Keaton has taken up `permanent residence' at the Canfields, the humor never reaches the level of the first portion of the film. Nonetheless, Keaton's genius is evident throughout the film, and it is this ability to innovate that constantly amazes.

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    • Trivia
      During the filming of the scene in which Buster Keaton is being swept downstream towards the waterfall, he was attached to a 'holdback' cable, concealed in the river. During the filming of the scene, the cable broke, and he was hurled down the rapids, battered by rocks and limbs, and was only barely able to grab an overhanging branch, which held him just long enough for the crew to reach and rescue him. This scene remains in the final print, and is fairly easy to spot. Just look for the point at which Keaton is being pulled downriver and 1) he suddenly looks back towards the camera, and 2) his speed in the water doubles, almost causing him to fly out of frame.
    • Errores
      When the donkey refuses to move from the rail tracks, the engineer and others curve the tracks around him. The long shot that shows the train moving past the donkey, however, shows the tracks back in a straight line.
    • Citas

      Joseph Canfield: Jim - I've been trying to forget this fued-why can't you do the same?

      James Canfield: No! - I came a long way to kill him-and I'm going to do it tonight!

    • Versiones alternativas
      In 1995, Film Preservation Associates, Inc. copyrighted a 73-minute version of this film with a music score compiled by Donald Hunsberger.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into The Golden Age of Buster Keaton (1979)

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    • How long is Our Hospitality?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 19 de noviembre de 1923 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Ninguno
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Hospitality
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Truckee River, California, Estados Unidos
    • Productora
      • Joseph M. Schenck Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 248
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 5min(65 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Silent
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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