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Fatty and Mabel's Simple Life

  • 1915
  • 24m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,0/10
315
MA NOTE
Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle, Ted Edwards, and Mabel Normand in Fatty and Mabel's Simple Life (1915)
SlapstickComedyShort

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueFatty is a farm hand at Mabel's father's place. He and Mabel love each other, but dad wants to marry Mabel off to the landowner's son in exchange for tearing up the mortgage. When Mabel and ... Tout lireFatty is a farm hand at Mabel's father's place. He and Mabel love each other, but dad wants to marry Mabel off to the landowner's son in exchange for tearing up the mortgage. When Mabel and Fatty find out dad's plan, they elope, pursued by dad, the hopeful suitor, and the local c... Tout lireFatty is a farm hand at Mabel's father's place. He and Mabel love each other, but dad wants to marry Mabel off to the landowner's son in exchange for tearing up the mortgage. When Mabel and Fatty find out dad's plan, they elope, pursued by dad, the hopeful suitor, and the local constables.

  • Director
    • Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
  • Stars
    • Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
    • Mabel Normand
    • Al St. John
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,0/10
    315
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
    • Stars
      • Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
      • Mabel Normand
      • Al St. John
    • 11Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 1Commentaire de critique
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Photos1

    Voir l’affiche

    Rôles principaux9

    Modifier
    Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
    Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
    • Roscoe
    Mabel Normand
    Mabel Normand
    • Mabel
    Al St. John
    Al St. John
    • The Squire's Son
    Josef Swickard
    Josef Swickard
    • Mabel's Father
    Joe Bordeaux
    • Farm Hand
    Ted Edwards
    • Minister
    Phyllis Allen
    • The Bride
    Billy Gilbert
    • The Groom
    Bobby Dunn
    Bobby Dunn
    • The Village Cop
    • Director
      • Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs11

    6,0315
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    Avis en vedette

    Snow Leopard

    Very Enjoyable Arbuckle/Normand Pairing

    This is a very enjoyable feature starring Roscoe Arbuckle and Mabel Normand, and its carefree slapstick style does not obscure a pretty good job of direction by Arbuckle himself. The story successfully blends some familiar elements with a couple of creative ideas, and the pacing works well, starting with an easygoing tempo and gradually building to a hilariously manic pace.

    It starts with a setup that was also used in several of Arbuckle's other earlier movies, with Normand as the farmer's daughter who is in love with hired hand Roscoe, and Al St. John as the rich rival preferred by Normand's father. The first half features lots of light slapstick in the farm and farmhouse. Most of it of good quality, and it also builds up sympathy for the two main characters.

    This sets up the extended chase in the second half, which is very funny and which packs a lot of good slapstick gags into a reel or so of film. Things move at breakneck speed, yet at no time does it seem out of control or pointless. It's an example of the Keystone style working at its best, with a free-wheeling feel that nevertheless must have involved good planning. The gags with the driver-less car and with the well squeeze an impressive amount of mileage out of a couple of simple ideas.

    For fans of silent comedy, almost anything with Arbuckle and Normand has considerable appeal. But this is one of their most enjoyable features together.
    7bkoganbing

    Down On The Farm, With The Farmer's Daughter

    This Fatty Arbuckle-Mabel Normand finds the two of them down on the farm where her dad doesn't approve of his daughter's interest in a guy with no future. He's got plans for her to marry the son of the richest man in the county who coincidentally enough has the mortgage on the property.

    I nearly blew my mind when I saw the handsome, but shallow suitor was Al St. John who later became a comic sidekick in hundreds of B westerns. He also was Fatty Arbuckle's nephew.

    Arbuckle and Normand are a pretty funny pair and that last scene with them fleeing in a car to get over the state line so they can marry is pretty hilarious. Remember what cars were back in those days, rather tricky things and Fatty's Flivver seems to have a mind of its own.

    Ironic indeed that both Arbuckle and Normand were involved in two of the biggest scandals and earliest ones in film history and both came to a premature end. Still they are funny pair to enjoy and appreciate today.
    7wmorrow59

    Barnyard frolics, sweet and charming

    Although the title was probably meant to be ironic, life sure does look simple for Mabel Normand and Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle in this pleasant Keystone comedy. Roscoe works on a farm owned by Mabel's father, and the two of them are secretly betrothed. Mabel, introduced by a title card simply reading "She was happy," is shown handling and kissing a calf. Roscoe, who is introduced with the phrase "Poor but honest," deals with the cattle, and rural life seems idyllic. Before long, we're offered a memorable sample of barnyard humor when Mabel squirts milk from a cow's udder through a knothole in a fence, right into Roscoe's eye. There's also an eruption of knockabout slapstick, when Roscoe has a run-in with farm hand Joe Bordeaux.

    Subsequently, the trouble starts when young Mr. Jenkins, the wealthy squire's son -- an uncharacteristically dapper Al St. John -- shows up to collect the rent. Mabel's father, who drinks on the sly, offers the young man a snort, and Jenkins' reaction makes it clear that the stuff is turpentine in all but name. Once he's recovered, Jenkins conveys the news that his father would be willing to tear up the mortgage if Mabel were to marry his son, i.e. Jenkins Jr. This arrangement is perfectly acceptable to Mabel's father, but when Mabel rejects it out of hand she is locked in her room. Roscoe comes to the rescue, and the lovers have no choice but to elope in a fast car -- a car that turns out to have a mind of its own, and an ornery "personality" -- while Mabel's father, the squire's son, and the local constabulary give chase on bicycles.

    Based on the outline above this may sound like just another typical Keystone comedy, but Mabel and Fatty's Simple Life stands out as an unusually sweet and charming entry by the rowdy standards of this studio, and it's also one of the most enjoyable of the many films that co-starred Mabel and Roscoe. It's easy to see why they were such a popular pair, and why some viewers assumed they were married in reality, which they weren't. They look good together, and play off each other beautifully. Their interpersonal chemistry just feels right, like such latter-day movie teams as Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers or William Powell & Myrna Loy. Here, when they kiss and Roscoe pretends to be disgusted, it looks like a spontaneous moment you might witness between a real life couple. When Mabel argues with her father, refusing to marry the squire's son and protesting "But I love Roscoe!" (it's easy to read her lips), she illustrates her preference with a gesture indicating tummy roundness, and on one level the gesture can be regarded as simplistic pantomime, yet when Mabel does it she somehow makes it real, and conveys a warmth of feeling for her beau that transcends movie play-acting of the era. By all accounts Mabel and Roscoe were genuinely fond of each other, and that comes across even when the action turns silly or frantic. They sure look like they're having fun.

    For viewers who know something about the personal histories of these performers even a lightweight romp like Mabel and Fatty's Simple Life looks poignant in retrospect. This film features several close-ups of Mabel that can melt your heart, all these years later. Suffice to say, off-camera in the real world both Normand and Arbuckle would have rough roads to travel in later years, but in these high-spirited comedies of the mid-1910s time is frozen and they are forever young, healthy and successful, with seemingly bright futures ahead. He's poor but honest, and she's happy.
    4jcravens42

    Unimaginative, unfunny

    Having spent months watching all the shorts with Buster Keaton and being absolutely charmed by Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle's direction, timing and "delivery", as well as regularly laughing out loud, I was so excited to see something earlier. And, wow... this was flat, boring and exactly what most people think silent movies will be: people literally jumping around, doing pratfalls and slapstick, literally kicking each other in the butt, and mugging for the camera. It's like they set up a camera and said, "Go try to do something that looks funny and we'll film it." The rampaging car was just... dumb. What a disappointment. Jump ahead to the later stuff, it's SO much better and really shows Arbuckle's charm and talents and creativity.
    7boblipton

    "She was happy"

    How strange to read that as the first title of a Keystone comedy! It's simple and human, which is not what one thinks of in the chaotic, monstrous world that Sennett supervised. Yet that is how it begins, with Mabel playing with farm animals like they are dolls, Roscoe clowning, and Mabel happy. Both of them are.

    But there is always an actual story to a Keystone, and here it is: Josef Swickard is Mabel's father, and Al St. John's father holds the mortgage on the farm.... and Swickard needn't worry about it if Mabel marries St. John. And so there's poking, and kicking, and milk sprayed in peoples' eyes, and other gags of that nature. That's the thing about the shorts that Arbuckle and Normand appeared in in 1915: it was as much about the story and the characters as the gags, and the gags served to advance the story as much as make the audience laugh. Arbuckle was moving on from Sennett's simple formulas.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Included in "The Forgotten Films of Roscoe Fatty Arbuckle" DVD collection, released by Mackinac Media and Laughsmith Entertainment.
    • Gaffes
      When Mabel's Father hears a knock at the door, he puts his bottle into the book and leaves the book on the table, overhanging the edge. After answering the door and bring the Squire's Son into the room, the book has disappeared.
    • Citations

      Title Card: She Was Happy

    • Connexions
      Featured in TCM Guest Programmer: John Landis (2009)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 18 janvier 1915 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langues
      • None
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Mabel and Fatty's Simple Life
    • société de production
      • Keystone Film Corporation
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      24 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Silent
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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