Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSilent comedy in which, using a drill to make holes in his floor, a golfer refuses to stop playing, swinging clubs from a tabletop, smashing mirrors and pottery throughout the house, even kn... Ler tudoSilent comedy in which, using a drill to make holes in his floor, a golfer refuses to stop playing, swinging clubs from a tabletop, smashing mirrors and pottery throughout the house, even knocking golf balls into his neighbor's soup bowl.Silent comedy in which, using a drill to make holes in his floor, a golfer refuses to stop playing, swinging clubs from a tabletop, smashing mirrors and pottery throughout the house, even knocking golf balls into his neighbor's soup bowl.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- The neighbor
- (as Babe Hardy)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Just look at the title of this one. It's just called "Golf." No reference to the events of a story involving golf, because it's really a showcase for crazy Larry Semon gags involving golf. Some semblance of a situation is introduced in the beginning. At first it seems like an excuse to set up some very punny title cards (which I must admit appreciating), but then it becomes clear that it's also setting up a funny bit wherein Larry is introduced rather destructively playing golf indoors. Oliver Hardy and Vernon Dent, both to go on to very long and successful comedy careers away from Semon are competing over his sister, and Hardy is in full burly-moustache-man mode.
We then move to probably the highlight of this short -- a very funny and really stunningly-orchestrated sequence involving a burrowing rodent moving Larry's golf ball back and forth as he tries to play it. Animals seemed to be a mine for his imagination as there are a bunch of them here.
Now, ethnic humor was far from uncommon in the films of this time, but it's impossible not to notice that almost every one of Larry Semon's films in particular seems to feature at least one sequence mocking black people. This one is no different, with an extended bit based on the stereotype of black servants being shuddering cowards. A pattern like this, I think, makes it safe to say that Semon's films display racist tendencies, to a greater extent than can be written off as a consequence of his being "a product of his time." I think we have to try to enjoy and evaluate his legitimate talents separately from the evidence of his character flaws.
After more fun and disconnected business at the golf course (including a funny but completely impossible scene in which Larry accidentally hits an egg with his golf club -- the egg doesn't break when the club hits it, but then flies through the air only to break when it lands on an unsuspecting victim), we are taken back to the family we originally met for a brief wrap-up.
I personally happen to enjoy the kind of human, personal comedy based on characters that Larry Semon tended to ignore, but "Golf" is a good example of him doing his specialty -- big, funny, spectacular gags -- well.
While this is not a bad film, it's not particularly inspired either and ranks as just another mediocre Semon film. On a few occasions, his shorts were brilliant, but this time it lacks the energy and amazing stunt-work that set his best films apart from most of the rest. Nothing special, but also worth a peek if you want to see Hardy in action as a villain.
Unfortunately, this movie 'Golf' isn't nearly as interesting as Joe Rock's career. Off the screen, comedian Larry Semon was an excellent amateur golfer, even introducing Oliver Hardy (his second banana in this film) to the sport. It would have been nice if Semon had taken advantage of this movie's theme to show off his prowess on the links. Instead, we get a dumb racist sequence featuring a black man frightened of a ground squirrel in a bag. There's also a very Semonesque sequence featuring an enormous vase teetering on a too-small stand. Larry Semon's universe is full of items stacked precariously high, teetering dangerously ... but (predictably enough) always falling and smashing eventually.
Semon often gave himself a love interest in his films, but here the leading lady is cast as his sister. She's Lucille Carlisle, a pert flirt. Carlisle does a neat bit of physical comedy involving a door. Later, Oliver Hardy has one nice piece of volte-face acting when he barges into a room, all bombast and bluster, then he instantaneously morphs into a courtly gent (resembling the 'Ollie' of Hal Roach films yet to come) when he sees there's a lady in the room.
Normally, I'm very glad to see Vernon Dent, a prolific and talented but sadly under-rated supporting comedian who came to a tragic end. (Dent, a victim of diabetic retinopathy, spent his last years in poverty and total blindness.) Unfortunately, at this point in their respective careers, Dent and Oliver Hardy are almost exactly the same size and shape ... and they're cast in similar roles in 'Golf', so this movie has one big blusterer too many. The film ends with Hardy getting kicked in the face by a mule ... an image which left me wincing rather than laughing. 'Golf' had a lot of potential, but it ultimately takes a mulligan. My rating: just 4 out of 10.
Você sabia?
- Citações
Title Card: There had been mysterious goings on going on around the house.
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração25 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.33 : 1