Blunderer Robert Benchley is going to show some house guests the film he and his wife took on a vacation trip. He sets up the projector and the reel begins...and nothing good happens for Ben... Read allBlunderer Robert Benchley is going to show some house guests the film he and his wife took on a vacation trip. He sets up the projector and the reel begins...and nothing good happens for Benchley from this point.Blunderer Robert Benchley is going to show some house guests the film he and his wife took on a vacation trip. He sets up the projector and the reel begins...and nothing good happens for Benchley from this point.
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Monica Bannister
- Girl
- (uncredited)
Marie Blake
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
John Butler
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Hobart Cavanaugh
- Party Guest Wearing Bowtie
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
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Featured reviews
Mr. Benchley lectures the audience, in his patented befuddled manner, on how to make home movies. He proceeds to show some awful home pictures with a running monologue on why the subject turned out so badly. The piece is one of a long series he did, beginning with the recording of his stage act 'The Treasurer's Report', winning an Oscar for HOW TO SLEEP and continuing on, in various formats, for MGM and Paramount through his death.
My parents used to take home movies and, for some time, insisted on exhibiting them to people. As they usually concerned the rather embarrassing things my brother and I did when we were toddlers, we managed to grab and destroy the relevant reels a couple of decades ago.
Nowadays, of course, everything is on computers and the internet, where nothing ever dies. I feel for you.
My parents used to take home movies and, for some time, insisted on exhibiting them to people. As they usually concerned the rather embarrassing things my brother and I did when we were toddlers, we managed to grab and destroy the relevant reels a couple of decades ago.
Nowadays, of course, everything is on computers and the internet, where nothing ever dies. I feel for you.
Home Movies (1940)
** (out of 4)
Robert Benchley short has him sitting at his desk where he begins to tell the audience the best way they should make home movies to keep their friends entertained. When then flash to a party he's throwing where he decides to show off his recent vacation but of course everything he filmed turned out wrong. If you're familiar with Benchley's work then you're going to know what to expect. The more films I see from him the more I'm starting to think that he's simply not for me. I'm sure he has many fans out there but I'm starting to lose faith because of seeing one bland film after another. This one here is certainly far from his worse and I actually laughed a couple times but in the end there just wasn't enough to keep me entertained. The humor is pretty much what you'd expect as the "movies" he's showing are out of focus, have heads cut off, have no pictures and feature various other issues that make for a bad movie. There aren't any surprises or interesting aspects to the film so this here is clearly for Benchley fans only.
** (out of 4)
Robert Benchley short has him sitting at his desk where he begins to tell the audience the best way they should make home movies to keep their friends entertained. When then flash to a party he's throwing where he decides to show off his recent vacation but of course everything he filmed turned out wrong. If you're familiar with Benchley's work then you're going to know what to expect. The more films I see from him the more I'm starting to think that he's simply not for me. I'm sure he has many fans out there but I'm starting to lose faith because of seeing one bland film after another. This one here is certainly far from his worse and I actually laughed a couple times but in the end there just wasn't enough to keep me entertained. The humor is pretty much what you'd expect as the "movies" he's showing are out of focus, have heads cut off, have no pictures and feature various other issues that make for a bad movie. There aren't any surprises or interesting aspects to the film so this here is clearly for Benchley fans only.
This is a Robert Benchley short. Benchley made a string of everyman films for Paramount and MGM and most showed him looking like a clueless dork. I have never been a huge fan of them though considering how many they made, somebody much have liked them.
"Home Movies" consists of Benchley showing off his boring home movies while pontificating ad nauseum about what a great filmmaker he was. However, time and again he got the shots all wrong and blames it on the machinery. He's such a fat-head that you really want this one to end and mercifully, it is a relatively short film. Additionally, the humor is practically nonexistent and there's little to commend in this one.
"Home Movies" consists of Benchley showing off his boring home movies while pontificating ad nauseum about what a great filmmaker he was. However, time and again he got the shots all wrong and blames it on the machinery. He's such a fat-head that you really want this one to end and mercifully, it is a relatively short film. Additionally, the humor is practically nonexistent and there's little to commend in this one.
9tavm
Just watched this Robert Benchley short as an extra on the My Favorite Wife DVD. He's at a desk surrounded by discarded film discussing the way to make and show home movies. Then we segue to his house where he's showing guests what he and his wife and child did on vacation. The shown film has some scenes running backwards, the child always blocked by either adults, some undercranking, and a shadow of an audience member walking out! All this I found hilarious and when Benchley is back in present with all those discarded film and he's smoking...well, watch this if you want to find out what happens. So on that note, I recommend Home Movies.
I wondered what was the reason behind this silly short: where the old studios worried about the possibility of people making their own films? For those like me who believe that there will come a time when this would be something normal that will put industrial cinema in its place and not as "the only and best way" to make films, this short is a reactionary piece of uninspired filmmaking. It is not even aware that the edited home movie that Robert Benchley shows to his guests is by itself quite attractive. It is an irony. Today it could pass for an "experimental film"! For me this is funnier than what scriptwriter Benchley and director Wrangell intended to do: ridicule home movies. Now that we are thankful that new technology has permitted the democratization of cinema, little by little, "Home Movies" is more dated than it has any right to be.
Did you know
- TriviaIncluded as a bonus on the Warner DVD of Mon épouse favorite (1940).
- ConnectionsFeatured in MGM Parade: Episode #1.12 (1955)
Details
- Runtime8 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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