All Categories
After falling from Hollywood stardom at the end of the Silent Era, quirky silent film comedian Harry Langdon made not only his first talking films, but also his first screen comeback with a series of eight two-reelers for comedy producer Hal Roach. This pre-code series offers an interesting and entertaining look at what critic James Agee referred to as Langdon's ''baby dope fiend'' characterization, presented for the only time in sound as the undiluted comic creation he made famous in silent films. Langdon had developed a strange, stream-of-consciousness vocal patter in vaudeville, as showcased here. With another fifteen years to go in talkies after he made these shorts, Harry Langdon would never again deliver to films full-force his truly bizarre humor. Along for the ride is the beautiful comedienne Thelma Todd in some of her earliest film appearances at the Lot of Fun, as well as others from the Hal Roach Stock Company like Edgar Kennedy and Max Davidson. This is Harry Langdon at his most surreal: 1929: Hotter Than Hot 1929: Sky Boy 1929: Skirt Shy 1930: The Head Guy 1930: The Fighting Parson 1930: The Big Kick 1930: The Shrimp 1930: The King Bonus Material: ''La estación de gasolina'' (Spanish language version of ''The Big Kick'') ''Hal Roach Presents Harry Langdon'' (1929) ''Hal Roach Studio Auction''(1963) Commentary by Richard M. Roberts Photo Gallery Supplemental music composed and performed by Andrew Earle Simpson