Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaJimmy is asked by the Swedish Government to translate for educational purpose "Little Red Riding Hood", but he can't afford to buy the book, so he tries reading it at the book shop, somethin... Ler tudoJimmy is asked by the Swedish Government to translate for educational purpose "Little Red Riding Hood", but he can't afford to buy the book, so he tries reading it at the book shop, something the owner doesn't like. But with a little help by the owner's wife it is not impossible,... Ler tudoJimmy is asked by the Swedish Government to translate for educational purpose "Little Red Riding Hood", but he can't afford to buy the book, so he tries reading it at the book shop, something the owner doesn't like. But with a little help by the owner's wife it is not impossible, even when the book is bought by somebody else, put in a car and the car is stolen...
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Car Thief
- (as Jack O'Brien)
- Car Thief with Glasses
- (as Fighting Dick Gilbert)
- Book Thief
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
The Jimmy Jumps are of variable quality but some have a surreal quality that marks them out from the average Charley Chase film (of any period). My personal favourite is I think The Rat's Knuckles but this film runs it close in its cheer zaniness. Even the initial idea - that Jump has been commissioned to translate Little Red Riding Hood into Swedish - is excellent and sets the tone for the off-beat events that follow. There is crime and a car-chase but totally unlike the equivalent events in other comedies and perfectly integrated with the central fantasy - the obsessive reader - that runs through the entire film.
Still known as "Jimmie Jump" at this point, Charley plays a bookish fellow who has been hired by the Swedish government to translate Little Red Riding Hood into Swedish. (They're offering 10,000 Krona for the job, which strikes me as a pretty good deal.) The problem is, Jimmie's so broke he can't afford to buy a copy of the book, so he lounges at an outdoor bookstall and browses a copy while surreptitiously working on his translation. He flirts shyly with the bookstore owner's daughter, played by the adorable Martha Sleeper, but flees when her father shows up. And yet when Jimmie fantasizes about the story he's translating he imagines not Martha in the lead role but a heavy, older woman who turns out to be a fellow customer. When another customer buys that copy of Red Riding Hood -- apparently the only one available -- and tosses it into his car, Jimmie's career is thrown into jeopardy. The situation worsens considerably when thieves attempt to steal the man's car, and the man pursues them in their vehicle with his own. Jimmie has no choice but to jump onto a bicycle and ride alongside the speeding car, and attempt to finish reading the story. (I guess he doesn't know the ending.) The car chase that ensues is, shall we say, one for the books.
The finale of this short offers one of the best comic chase sequences I've ever seen: it's fast and furious, expertly edited, and highlighted by a macabre gag that must be seen to be believed. Charley's Red Riding Hood fantasy, featuring an affable-looking German Shepherd as the wolf, is another highlight in a short that's packed with incident, all beautifully choreographed and which somehow unfolds as naturally as the weirdest dream you've ever had after eating too much spicy food.
This one-reel short was produced in 1924 as one of Chase's first starring efforts for Hal Roach, but it sat on the shelf for more than a year, perhaps due to concerns that it was so crazy it might alienate viewers unfamiliar with the star's more characteristic work. By the middle of 1925 Chase had established his style and was popular with audiences, so popular that he was moving into the longer two-reel format, so the studio must have figured that it was safe to release Big Red Riding Hood. I'm glad they did, and happier still that it survives to be enjoyed today. Even jaded film buffs who think they've seen it all may be pleasantly surprised by what they find here.
** 1/2 (out of 4)
The Swedish government asks bookworm Jimmy Jump (Charley Chase) to translate Little Red Riding Hood for them. Jimmy needs the extra money but he's actually never read the story so he must try to do so no matter what might get in his way. This one-reeler comes in a period where Chase had moved onto two-reelers so it's somewhat interesting that he would do a film like this when it's pretty clear that someone else might have been better for the job. I'm not saying Chase is bad here because he isn't but at the same time the material really isn't the strongest. The biggest problem is that the entire story idea is more interesting than funny. The idea that a cheap bookworm would do whatever it takes to read the story without having to buy the book is neat but we just don't get any laughs. The end of the story turns into a Buster Keaton like production as we have some bigger stunts than we normally see from Chase and this includes a sequence where he's attached to the car reading and not realizing that he's about to go over a cliff. We also get a fantasy sequence where the actual story is acted out and this here is pretty surreal and has a few laughs especially when Chase is trying to cut down some trees.
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Le grand chaperon rouge
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 10 min
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.33 : 1