Harold, médecin de campagne, a recours à des thérapeutiques inattendues. Il soigne leur esprit plutôt que leur corps, leur faisant partager son optimisme. Appelé au chevet d'une jeune fille ... Tout lireHarold, médecin de campagne, a recours à des thérapeutiques inattendues. Il soigne leur esprit plutôt que leur corps, leur faisant partager son optimisme. Appelé au chevet d'une jeune fille malade, il la soignera en la rendant amoureuse..Harold, médecin de campagne, a recours à des thérapeutiques inattendues. Il soigne leur esprit plutôt que leur corps, leur faisant partager son optimisme. Appelé au chevet d'une jeune fille malade, il la soignera en la rendant amoureuse..
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
- Boy's Pal
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- Boy Patient
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- Man
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- Card Player
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- Asylum Guard
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- Card-Playing Father
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- Undetermined Secondary Role
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- Card Player's Daughter
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- Haskell's Butler
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- Asylum Guard
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- Jamison's Mother
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- Restaurant Hostess
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- Undetermined Secondary Role
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Avis à la une
Lloyd's two earlier feature films, December 1921's 'A Sailor-Made Man,' and September 1922's 'Grandma's Boy,' both evolved from a script containing only 30 minutes of the actor's antics. The two screenplays were extended from their core plots to fill in another 15 to 30 minutes of action. "Dr. Jack," from its opening minutes follows a young doctor, Lloyd, as he administers understanding, a dose of fresh air with exercise and a healthy diet to his treatments. He stands in contrast to Dr. Ludwig, a firm believer in prescription drugs, closed windows and drapes-and especially no exercise.
Dr. Jack is brought in for a second opinion after The Sick-Little-Well-Girl, tenderly acted by Mildred Davis, has been Dr. Ludwig's patient for four long years. The two doctors are naturally at odds before circumstances give Lloyd an idea to break Davis out of her funk. The movie turned out to be a blockbuster hit, earning a top ten box office spot while earning over one million dollars.
**** (out of 4)
Dr. Jack (Harold Lloyd) is the nicest doctor in town who gets a kick out of helping people in his own strange ways. His latest client is a woman who seems to be healthy but a mean German doctor is making her appeal ill so he can keep collecting from her rich father. This is certainly the best film I've seen from Lloyd. I wouldn't say any of the jokes are hysterical but all of them are very fast paced and come non-stop. The highlight includes one scene where a girl calls Lloyd because "Mary" is dying but when he shows up "Mary" turns out to be her baby doll. Another highlight is the ending, which is a madcap of fast jokes as Lloyd dresses up as a vampire to show the girl isn't sick.
In its favor, however, the movie does provide Mildred Davis with one of her best roles. Miss Davis rarely received a chance to display any histrionic ability. Her supine heroines were mostly purely decorative. Here, however, she has an opportunity to play a character not a cipher, and she rises to the bait magnificently.
Silent comedian Harold Lloyd had another success in this wildly funny movie. Healthy servings of sentimental nostalgia mixed into the plot only add to the fun. Playing a doctor whose good humor & common sense make him the most popular fellow in rural Magnolia Meadows, Harold makes full use of his tremendous athletic abilities to propel the storyline, piling one gag on top of another. Whether exiting his moving jalopy to shoo cows from his path, saving a naughty tyke from a spanking or breaking up a poker game in a most unique fashion, Harold is never less than hilarious. Finally, he leads one of his wild trademark chases, this time through a spooky house, a sequence that includes both a wonderful Lon Chaney spoof and one of the funniest enraged dogs to ever appear on film.
Mildred Davis has an unusually good role, showing off her acting skills as the spunky invalid. Eric Mayne is appropriately hissable as the bearded villain. Movie mavens will recognize OUR GANG's mischievous Mickey Daniels as Harold's freckle-faced patient and darling old Anna Townsend as the lonely mother of Harold's lawyer friend - both uncredited.
Robert Israel has composed an excellent film score which perfectly complements Harold's antics on the screen.
I really like the sweet doctoring from Dr. Jack until they do the accidental kiss. I get the idea of a Sleeping Beauty kiss. It would fit the story much more if she gets so excited that she's the one who kisses him. There is a lot of chasing around the rooms comedy. This is all good fun. I would really make that change with the kiss.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesHarold Lloyd would marry his female lead Mildred Davis a year later in 1923. They would remain married until her death in 1969. Harold would die two years later. They had three children.
- GaffesAt the restaurant, after ordering, Dr. Jack puts the menu down on the table twice between shots - first with his left hand, then with his right.
- Citations
Jamison, the Lawyer: I know a patient in the city that you can cure with your methods - The doctor she has now is an old fogy - a four-flusher!
- Crédits fousThe title page appears as a prescription on an Rx pad: Hal Roach prescribes Harold Lloyd in "Dr. Jack". Subsequent credits also are on Rx pages.
- Versions alternativesThe 60-minute TCM print shown was presented by Harold Lloyd Entertainment and contained a music score composed, arranged and conducted by 'Robert Israel (II)'. The score was performed by The Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra and by members of The Robert Israel Orchestra.
- ConnexionsFeatured in American Masters: Harold Lloyd: The Third Genius (1989)
- Bandes originalesThe Darktown Strutters' Ball
(1917)
Written by Shelton Brooks
In the Robert Israel score when the sheet music is shown
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Dr. Jack?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 113 440 $US (estimé)
- Durée
- 1 heure
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1