https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yHoT_Qch7jE
Buster Keaton’s penÂchant and skill for comedic stunts made him one of the biggest stars of the silent-film era. Nobody at the time imagÂined that he would still be engagÂing in danÂgerÂous-lookÂing pratÂfalls 40 years latÂer in his sevÂenÂties, espeÂcialÂly since his career seemed to have come to an end in 1926. That was the year of his CivÂil War-set film The GenÂerÂal, which, though now critÂiÂcalÂly respectÂed, left conÂtemÂpoÂrary audiÂences cold. Flops are, perÂhaps, inevitable, but this one hapÂpened to incorÂpoÂrate into the picÂture the most expenÂsive shot in cinÂeÂma hisÂtoÂry to date. As a result, says the Ming video above, “Keaton was nevÂer givÂen conÂtrol over his films again.”
IronÂiÂcalÂly, unlike the cinÂeÂmatÂic images that had made him famous, the $42,000 shot in The GenÂerÂal did not put its direcÂtor-star in apparÂent morÂtal perÂil, depictÂing only a railÂroad bridge colÂlapsÂing while a train crossÂes it. Though undoubtÂedÂly impresÂsive, it wouldÂn’t have been what peoÂple went to a Buster Keaton movie to see.
Here was a man willÂing, after all, to fly from the back of a movÂing streetÂcar, danÂgle off the edge of a waterÂfall, risk being crushed by an entire wall of a house, and even break his neck — though he didÂn’t disÂcovÂer that he’d done so until eleven years latÂer. MakÂing these and all of Keaton’s othÂer famous stunts involved conÂsidÂerÂable amounts of both calÂcuÂlatÂed danÂger and movie magÂic.
Some of that movie magÂic was conÂceived by Keaton himÂself, the first filmÂmakÂer, in Quentin TaranÂtiÂno’s words, to “use cinÂeÂma itself to be the joke.” Few perÂformÂers could have adaptÂed so well to the mediÂum of silent film, with its realms of silent comÂeÂdy just waitÂing to be opened. And after sound had been around for a few decades, longÂtime movieÂgoÂers startÂed to feel like cinÂeÂma had lost some of the visuÂal exuÂberÂance that it once posÂsessed. By that time, luckÂiÂly, Keaton had emerged from his long post-GenÂerÂal periÂod of hard-drinkÂing malaise, ready to appear not just in the movies again, but also on teleÂviÂsion, delightÂing the genÂerÂaÂtions who rememÂbered his earÂliÂer work and fasÂciÂnatÂing those too young to recÂogÂnize him. Even today, when we find ourÂselves laughÂing at a scene of elabÂoÂrateÂly orchesÂtratÂed physÂiÂcal danÂger, we are, in some sense, witÂnessÂing Keaton’s legaÂcy.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
Watch the Only Time CharÂlie ChapÂlin & Buster Keaton PerÂformed TogethÂer On-Screen (1952)
A SuperÂcut of Buster Keaton’s Most AmazÂing Stunts
101 Free Silent Films: The Great ClasÂsics
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
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