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Une riche famille

Original title: Hot Water
  • 1924
  • Passed
  • 53m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Josephine Crowell, Harold Lloyd, and Mickey McBan in Une riche famille (1924)
SlapstickComedy

Episodic look at married life and in-law problems. Adventures include a ride on a crowded trolley with a live turkey, a wild spin in a new auto with the in-laws in tow, and a sequence in whi... Read allEpisodic look at married life and in-law problems. Adventures include a ride on a crowded trolley with a live turkey, a wild spin in a new auto with the in-laws in tow, and a sequence in which Hubby accidentally chloroforms his mother-in-law and is convinced that he has killed he... Read allEpisodic look at married life and in-law problems. Adventures include a ride on a crowded trolley with a live turkey, a wild spin in a new auto with the in-laws in tow, and a sequence in which Hubby accidentally chloroforms his mother-in-law and is convinced that he has killed her. When she begins sleep-walking, he thinks that she has returned to haunt him.

  • Directors
    • Fred C. Newmeyer
    • Sam Taylor
  • Writers
    • Sam Taylor
    • John Grey
    • Tim Whelan
  • Stars
    • Harold Lloyd
    • Jobyna Ralston
    • Josephine Crowell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Fred C. Newmeyer
      • Sam Taylor
    • Writers
      • Sam Taylor
      • John Grey
      • Tim Whelan
    • Stars
      • Harold Lloyd
      • Jobyna Ralston
      • Josephine Crowell
    • 24User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos32

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    Top cast15

    Edit
    Harold Lloyd
    Harold Lloyd
    • Hubby Harold
    Jobyna Ralston
    Jobyna Ralston
    • Wifey
    Josephine Crowell
    Josephine Crowell
    • Wifey's Mother - Mrs. Winnifred Ward Stokes
    Charles Stevenson
    Charles Stevenson
    • Wifey's Big Brother - Charley Stokes
    Mickey McBan
    Mickey McBan
    • Wifey's Little Brother - Bobby Stokes
    Evelyn Burns
    Evelyn Burns
    • Irate Streetcar Passenger
    • (uncredited)
    Andy De Villa
    • Glen Reed
    • (uncredited)
    Edgar Dearing
    Edgar Dearing
    • Motorcycle Cop
    • (uncredited)
    Pat Harmon
    Pat Harmon
    • Burly Trolley Car Straphanger
    • (uncredited)
    Fred Holmes
    • Undetermined Secondary Role
    • (uncredited)
    John T. Prince
    John T. Prince
    • Waiting Wedding Guest Outside Church
    • (uncredited)
    Billy Rinaldi
    • Brunette Boy on Trolley
    • (uncredited)
    Hayes E. Robertson
    Hayes E. Robertson
    • Car Driver Nearly Crashing into Harolds Car
    • (uncredited)
    George Warde
    • Blond Boy on Trolley
    • (uncredited)
    S.D. Wilcox
    S.D. Wilcox
    • Gene Kornman
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Fred C. Newmeyer
      • Sam Taylor
    • Writers
      • Sam Taylor
      • John Grey
      • Tim Whelan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    7.11.6K
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    Featured reviews

    7didi-5

    hooray for Harold Lloyd

    The jingle which went with TV showings of Lloyd's films in the 1980s still stays with me "a pair of glasses and a smile", and that was the time I first saw 'Hot Water'.

    It is a short film where Harold struggles with parcels and a live turkey on public transport, and shows off his new car to the battleaxe mother-in-law. Of course there are high-risk stunts, of course the car gets destroyed, and all the usual stuff, making a short but brilliant silent classic. Jobyna Ralston plays Harold's love interest and we just sit back and laugh as silly things happen to him.

    I do like Lloyd and along with Chaplin and Keaton he really is the yardstick by which all film comedians after should be judged. My personal favourite of his is 'Girl Shy' but this hour-long treasure comes close.
    9gftbiloxi

    One of Harold Lloyd's Finest

    Most of his films find Harold Lloyd struggling for success against impossible odds in order to make good and win the girl. HOT WATER is atypical, for here we find that Lloyd has already made good and won the girl--but now he has to put up with his in-laws, and his wife's family is enough to daunt the bravest man: a nasty baby brother, a free-loading older brother, and a battle-ax mother who has "a natural gift for destruction." This short film--which finds Lloyd dismayed when he wins a live turkey at a raffle, the victim of some truly savage back-seat-driving, and then convinced that he has accidentally killed his hateful mother-in-law--abounds with one sight gag after another, and easily equals any of the longer and better known films Lloyd made later in his career.

    With his signature straw hat, round glasses, and innocent enthusiasm, Lloyd personifies the go-getter spirit of the 1920s, and he is generally regarded as one of the three great male silent comics; sadly, however, his films have been somewhat neglected over the years and seldom receive the attention showered on the films of Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton. If you've never been exposed to Lloyd beyond his famous SAFETY LAST, you'll find HOT WATER an excellent place to begin--a film sure to make you want to see more and more.

    Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
    Snow Leopard

    Fun, Resourceful Comedy

    This Harold Lloyd comedy is fun and resourceful, squeezing a surprising amount of material out of a couple of simple ideas. The situations are simple and the plot is nearly non-existent, but the characters are entertaining and there are lots of props and gag ideas that are used creatively, with everything helped along by Lloyd's energy and expert timing.

    The story is essentially three different loosely-connected sequences. Harold goes on a shopping trip and has all kinds of difficulty on a streetcar, then he takes his in-laws on a tumultuous ride in his new car, and then he faces some unsettling domestic disturbances. Each sequence has a slightly different feel, and uses Lloyd's character in somewhat different ways, giving him a chance to perform a number of different comedy ideas.

    Josephine Crowell as the mother-in-law makes a good antagonist, and Charles Stevenson strikes the right note as the oafish brother-in-law. Jobyna Ralston doesn't get the chance to do a lot of comedy, but she is engaging as always.

    It's good comedy, and it builds things up fairly well. There are many details that are used once for their own sake, and that then return in the frenzied climactic sequence, and some of the ideas are pretty clever. It's often deliberately far-fetched, and in a manner that comes off rather well.
    9alice liddell

    Brilliant, satiric, underrated masterpiece from Harold Lloyd.

    Less profound than Keaton, less versatile than Chaplin, Harold Lloyd was still closer, on a literal level, than either of them to his intended, middle-class audience. When we think of the 1920s, we usually conjure up images of flappers and Fitzgerald, Paris and Prohibition, the Jazz Age, but for most bourgeoisie, the decade was an entrenchment of conservative, conformist, almost Victorian values, that we most readily associate with the 1950s - family, suburbia, acquistion of new contraptions, keeping up with the neighbours. Although dismissed as minor-Lloyd, HOT WATER is an hilarious, benevolent satire on precisely the same traumas - domestic entrapment, emasculated masculinity, dehumanising dominance of technology - that would haunt the likes of Sirk, Minnelli or Ray.

    The film begins with disruption, rupture, misunderstanding and absence as a furious father at a wedding wonders where the bridegroom is. We cut to said absentee, who through a series of disasters ended up at the wrong church, and his best-man Harold, who thinks him an idiot for giving up the joys of bachelorhood he'll never forsake. As he swears this, he bumps into a beautiful woman he immediately falls in love with.

    He should have listened to his own advice. Henpecked from the start, he has the additional problem of in-laws - an ogre-mother, a layabout elder brother, and a brattish younger one - who are always dropping in. Harold has just bought a car on hire purchase, and the family invite themselves on a ride that sees Harold breaking numerous laws, barely escaping life-threatening mishaps, and eventually crashing into an autobus. At home, spurred on by a sympathetic neighbour and drink, he decides to confront his mother-in-law.

    I have no idea why even Lloyd fans don't rate this film. On a simple entertainment level, the set-pieces are superbly inventive and funny. Forced to purchase a Babel of groceries by his wife, Harold also has the misfortune to win a live turkey. On a tram home, Harold annoys the other passengers by dropping his groceries, having his turkey peck at neighbours, kick an uncharitable commuter as he tries to shake out a large spider up his trousers. The scene climaxes with the subversive fowl exposing the undergarments of a priggish matron, and Harold being kicked off the tram.

    This scene is superbly choreographed, but also supremely satirical, revealing at once the consumer craze of Lloyd's (and our's) society, the need to accumulate to acquire status, and yet the way such zeal can militate against that status, because of the way it disrupts less modern forms of 'gentility'. The expulsion from the tram of Harold by a gang of respectables is equally chilling.

    This lack of power in the public realm extends to the private also, in which a man's home is not his castle. It's nice to see mother-in-law jokes are not confined to dodgy old English comics, and Harold's is a real monster, as well as a leading light of the community, bulky, witch-faced, termperance campaigner, dabbler in the Occult and somnambulent (in a brilliant sequence, she rises slowly from her bed NOSFERATU-style).

    Her threat to Harold is both gendered - in that she, a woman, makes him ridiculous and subservient, not a man who dominates his own home - and generational, as Harold, with his new gadgets, is constantly bedevilled by Mother's matronly, insistent, Old-World advice. The clash is quite subversive, especially in the car sequence, which leaves a policeman driven into a lake, and a wake of destruction. The tension between modern capitalism and older conservatism is again brilliantly visualised.

    The car itself is fetishised as the spanking image of modernity, totem of freedom and progress. Lloyd exposes the myth of this - the bright black contraption not only takes him right back to where he started (in vast debt too), but is absolutely destroyed. This is a technology, a progress, a capitalism, that is running too fast for a society to catch up with.
    7SnoopyStyle

    solid Harold Lloyd comedy

    Harold (Harold Lloyd) crashes into a girl on the way to his friend's wedding. The couple gets married and has many misadventures. One involves a turkey. There is the annoying mother in-law. Harold gets drunk which leads to a chloroform incident.

    This is Harold Lloyd doing his character with his style of comedy. There are some fun physical comedy. There are stunts but none of the highflying ones. It's good clean fun.

    More like this

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    7.0
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    7.5
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    Ça t'la coupe!
    7.7
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    Marin malgré lui
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    Oh! La belle voiture
    6.6
    Oh! La belle voiture

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      "Butterfly Six" is a fictional model name for the car. It is actually a 1923 Chevrolet Superior.
    • Goofs
      When the traffic cop issues Hubby Harold a ticket, it reads, in part, "You are hereby notified to appear at Police Headquarters within twenty-four hours of the above date....", but there is no date or time or any other handwritten data on the ticket save for the policeman's signature, nor is there any designated space to write such information.
    • Quotes

      Title Card: Married life is like dandruff - it falls heavily upon your shoulders - you get a lot of free advice about it - but up to date nothing has been found to cure it.

    • Alternate versions
      In 1992, The Harold Lloyd Trust and Photoplay Productions distributed a 59-minute version of this film, in association with Thames Television International and Channel Four, with a musical score written by 'Adrian Johnston'. The addition of modern credits stretch the time to 60 minutes.
    • Connections
      Featured in Un Cottage dans le Dartmoor (1930)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 26, 1924 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • None
    • Also known as
      • Hot Water
    • Filming locations
      • 1214 S Lake St, Los Angeles, California, USA(Hubby Harold first meets Wifey)
    • Production company
      • The Harold Lloyd Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 53m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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