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En vitesse

Original title: Speedy
  • 1928
  • Passed
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
4.7K
YOUR RATING
Ann Christy and Harold Lloyd in En vitesse (1928)
ActionComedyFamily

Harold "Speedy" Swift, a fan of Babe Ruth and the New York Yankees, saves from extinction the city's last horse-drawn trolley, operated by his girlfriend's grandfather.Harold "Speedy" Swift, a fan of Babe Ruth and the New York Yankees, saves from extinction the city's last horse-drawn trolley, operated by his girlfriend's grandfather.Harold "Speedy" Swift, a fan of Babe Ruth and the New York Yankees, saves from extinction the city's last horse-drawn trolley, operated by his girlfriend's grandfather.

  • Director
    • Ted Wilde
  • Writers
    • John Grey
    • Lex Neal
    • Howard Emmett Rogers
  • Stars
    • Harold Lloyd
    • Ann Christy
    • Bert Woodruff
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    4.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ted Wilde
    • Writers
      • John Grey
      • Lex Neal
      • Howard Emmett Rogers
    • Stars
      • Harold Lloyd
      • Ann Christy
      • Bert Woodruff
    • 47User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos44

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    Top cast35

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    Harold Lloyd
    Harold Lloyd
    • Harold 'Speedy' Swift
    Ann Christy
    Ann Christy
    • Jane Dillon
    Bert Woodruff
    Bert Woodruff
    • Pop Dillon - Jane's Grand-daddy
    Babe Ruth
    Babe Ruth
    • Babe Ruth
    Byron Douglas
    Byron Douglas
    • W.S. Wilton
    Brooks Benedict
    Brooks Benedict
    • Steve Carter
    King Tut the Dog
    • The Dog
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • Coney Island Baseball Concessionaire
    • (uncredited)
    James Bradbury Jr.
    James Bradbury Jr.
    • Chauffeur
    • (uncredited)
    Chet Brandenburg
    Chet Brandenburg
    • Hoodlum
    • (uncredited)
    Edna Mae Cooper
    Edna Mae Cooper
    • Undetermined Secondary Role
    • (uncredited)
    Josephine Crowell
    Josephine Crowell
    • Lady in Car
    • (uncredited)
    Andy De Villa
    • Traffic Cop
    • (uncredited)
    Jimmy Dime
    Jimmy Dime
    • Tough
    • (uncredited)
    Bobby Dunn
    Bobby Dunn
    • Tough
    • (uncredited)
    Herbert Evans
    Herbert Evans
    • Restaurant Manager
    • (uncredited)
    Lou Gehrig
    Lou Gehrig
    • Lou Gehrig
    • (uncredited)
    Dick Gilbert
    Dick Gilbert
    • Tough Guy
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Ted Wilde
    • Writers
      • John Grey
      • Lex Neal
      • Howard Emmett Rogers
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    7.64.6K
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    Featured reviews

    10bjon

    Great Silent Movie, and Still Hilarious!

    I really wasn't that familiar with Harold Lloyd until I saw this silent. I wasn't going to watch it at first, but I got immersed in it almost immediately! What glorious and successful use of slapstick! I'm not even into slapstick that much, but this one had me "rolling in the aisles," or should I say my living room chair.

    Mr. Lloyd had a knack of making fun of himself, which to me is the essence of anything comical. I guess that's why I don't watch anything too recent, since so much comedy these days is either at somebody else's expense, or just plain stupid. Here we have the hero, Lloyd, trying to do something nice for someone else, while having absolute perseverance throughout impossible trials and tribulations. That makes it even better. No violence, thank goodness!

    Mr. Lloyd was a genius, and he ranks with Buster Keaton in bringing timeless laughs.
    7slokes

    Broadway Melody Minus Noise

    The last Harold Lloyd silent comedy, "Speedy" is a yuk-filled feature boasting some impressive thrill scenes and Jazz Age Manhattan ambiance. If not as satisfying as some earlier Lloyd silents, it manages to showcase just why Lloyd was the most popular of the big three silent clowns.

    Harold plays the title character, who may have gotten his name from undiagnosed ADD. Speedy flits from job to job while he dreams of baseball and his girl Jane (Ann Christy). Jane wants to marry Speedy, but first there's the business of her grandfather's horse-drawn trolley, which a greedy railway magnate wants to put out of business any way he can.

    As other commenters here point out, this is less a unified film than a sequence of four shorts stitched together as follows: 1. Harold the soda jerk. 2. Harold and Jane at Coney Island. 3. Harold the taxi driver. 4. Harold saves Pop's trolley. The only serious concession to "Speedy's" feature length is that some business of short #4 is introduced between shorts #1 and #2.

    Add to that the hit-or-miss gagginess of much of the film, and what you wind up with is less satisfying than Lloyd classics like "The Freshman" or "The Kid Brother." Even early Lloyd features like "Grandma's Boy" or "Dr. Jack" had loftier goals than the laugh-driven "Speedy". Yet "Speedy" is funny most of the time, and does work in some other ways, too.

    Though I'm not a Yankees fan, I'm a sucker with any movie that features Babe Ruth. Here, in a cameo, he does excellent work as a passenger afraid for his life getting a mad cab ride from the star-struck Speedy.

    "Even when you strike out, you miss 'em close," Speedy enthuses, eyes on Babe and not the road.

    "I don't miss 'em half as close as you do!" Babe yells back.

    It's cool just seeing these two icons share the screen, and if you watch just before the 53rd minute, you'll see a third icon, Lou Gehrig, slip into the background during a Harold-Babe two-shot and proceed to stick his tongue out at the camera!

    As fun as moments like that are, "Speedy" doesn't add up to the sum of its parts until the final third, when we resume the story of Pop's horse-drawn trolley. There we get a fitting capper to Lloyd's silent-clown career, with a hilarious street battle between young toughs and old coots fought with flypaper, horseshoes, and a pegleg, among other implements. Then there's the final trolley ride, which employs a horrific-looking real accident to create some tension over the question of whether Harold will save the day.

    Like many note, "Speedy" is as captivating for what you see in the background. So much of it was shot for real in Manhattan, and even when there's no comically rude Hall-of-Fame first basemen in sight, there's a lot of energy and activity on view, whether its tugboats on the Hudson, taxis on Times Square, or street urchins ingenuously looking at the camera wondering what's up. The Coney Island sequence is the most labored part of the film for me, but it's still not only inventively played out but especially edifying for those of us who wonder what amusement parks were like before the age of the steel roller-coaster or more stringent safety regulations.

    Lloyd and director Ted Wilde knew what the audience wanted, and deliver it here with a cherry on top. If not quite as on the money after more than 80 years, "Speedy" is still well worth watching for fans of Lloyd and silent comedy.
    9ccthemovieman-1

    New York City, Harold & The Babe In Their Prime

    For a number of people, this is their Harold Lloyd film, especially if they are from New York City. I can understand that, as it's a funny movie and has great shots of what it looked like in NYC in 1927. (The film was released in 1928). It also is famous for having a 5-minute guest appearance by Babe Ruth.

    My vote still goes to "The Freshman," as Lloyd's best but that's all subjective. This is a solid entry and if nothing, else it's a great showcase to see what The Big Apple looked like 80 years ago.

    This gets off to good start, too, unlike a number of silent comedies. Harold's ice- cream parlor antics, as a soda jerk, are a lot of fun to watch. I loved the way he signaled his co-workers on how his beloved home team, the Yankees, were doing inning-by-inning. After Harold loses that job, he winds up driving a cab and then, at the end trying to help his girlfriend's father. The elderly man drives the last horse-trolley in the city and is being threatened by someone who wants to buy him out, and Harold comes to the rescue with a dramatic race to beat the clock in the final hectic 15 minutes of the film.

    While he was driving the cab, he gets the famous Ruth as one of his customers and he's so excited he almost cracks up the cab and Ruth goes crazy in the back seat. It's a funny scene.

    Also tied in with the film is a nice, long scene with Lloyd and his girl (Ann Christy) having a wild day at Coney Island. That, too, was fun and interesting to see. In all, a fun movie and a chance to see Lloyd finish up his great silent career, before films changed to "talkies."
    8gelatoflo

    A Very Charming Film

    SPEEDY might not be as tight as his other masterpieces- it's a bit episodic, yet those scenes on Coney Island are lovely all the same, and the way they set up a little home inside the truck is poetic. This is the last silent of Lloyd, and it reflects the helplessness towards progression and the nostalgia of the good old past, which is the essence of what makes this film so wonderfully rich and graceful. That attempt of saving the last horse-drawn tram as goal(instead of personal achievement), and especially the help from the civil war veterans and on-lookers(instead of himself as an all-able hero) is atypical of Lloyd, but makes this film warmer, special, and very lovely.
    10Ron Oliver

    End Of An Era For Mr. Lloyd

    A SPEEDY young fellow races against time to save an unscrupulous syndicate from destroying the horse car line belonging to his girlfriend's grandfather.

    Harold Lloyd made his final silent screen appearance in this very funny movie, which solidifies his reputation as one of the greatest film stars of the era. His impeccable timing and elaborate stunts are abundantly on display and his athletic abilities, despite the severe accident suffered to his right hand some years earlier, are still honed to a razor sharpness. He makes comic mincemeat out of his stints as soda jerk & taxi driver, and whether rallying the neighborhood Civil War veterans to fight off a gang of hoodlums, or ending the film with another of his marvelous trademark chase scenes, Harold is never less than utterly hilarious.

    His new leading lady is played by spunky Ann Christy; they share a glorious, extended Coney Island Sunday sequence full of sight gags, high jinks & sweet romance. Elderly Bert Woodruff plays her beloved grandfather, a grumpy old coot with a heart of gold. And, for a few splendid moments, the immortal Babe Ruth finds himself uncomfortably ensconced in the back seat of Harold's taxi for a madcap dash to Yankee Stadium.

    Movie mavens will recognize an uncredited Josephine Crowell as the very nervous lady in a limousine who has a close encounter with Harold's runaway trolley.

    Rear screen projection was thankfully very rare during the silent era. What was filmed was really happening. However, it's use can be seen encroaching on the sublime reality of Harold's final chase sequence in SPEEDY. Safety factors, among other considerations, had to be accommodated.

    Carl Davis has composed an excellent film score which perfectly complements Harold's antics on the screen.

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    Related interests

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    Action
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    Comedy
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    Family

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      During the Coney Island magic mirror scene, Harold Lloyd gives the middle finger to his reflection in the mirror. This obscene gesture was permitted by censors in motion pictures prior to the enforcement of the draconian Hays Code in 1934 and can be seen in a number of other contemporary films such as Alfred Hitchcock's Le ring (1927), by Robert Armstrong in 4 de l'aviation (1932), and by Bette Davis (to Douglas Fairbanks Jr) in Parachute Jumper (1933).
    • Goofs
      Although this film is set in New York City, in one scene where Speedy is in the trolley on wheels (not on a track), it stops in front of Guys Furniture Co., with its address on Santa Monica Boulevard visible on the store's sign.
    • Quotes

      Babe Ruth: [after riding in Speedy's cab] If I ever want to commit suicide, I'll call you.

    • Alternate versions
      In 1992, The Harold Lloyd Trust and Photoplay Productions presented a 85-minute version of this film in association with Thames Television International and Channel Four, with a musical score written by Carl Davis. The addition of modern credits stretched the time to 86 minutes.
    • Connections
      Featured in Calendar: Episode dated 16 April 1962 (1962)
    • Soundtracks
      Speedy Boy
      Written by Jesse Greer and Raymond Klages

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 4, 1928 (Brazil)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Speedy
    • Filming locations
      • Luna Park, Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • The Harold Lloyd Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Silent

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