Saturday, January 22, 2011
was this sequence timed to music? could be...
While it's possible (probable?) that Buster had music played on set to keep a beat for this sequence, what ever it was wasn't a waltz. Remember, what we're watching (at 24 fps) is sped up about 50% from the speed it was shot at (16 fps).
I also think Roscoe Arbuckle unofficially co-directed much of this short. "Life of the Party" was released Nov 1920, and "The Scarecrow was released Dec 1920, so Roscoe may have had the down-time...besides his dog Luke is featured in most of the film and you don't think Roscoe just dropped Luke off and went fishing do you? Big Joe Roberts is practically a stand in for Roscoe, character-wise, rather than being the menacing villain he usually plays. Anyway, it's just a theory...
The audio you hear in this clip was recorded live in performance at the Egyptian Theater in Boise, ID in September 2010, when I accompanied a couple of shorts on the theater's original-installation Robert Morton theatre organ. Click here to see my video blog post from that event.
Here's the newly uploaded video:
Playing for "Speedy" tonight at the Riverdale YM-YWHA. Have chosen "All On Account of a Transfer" as an opening short, since it concerns trolleys and was shot at/near the Edison studios in the Bronx, not too far from the Riverdale Y.
See you at the silents!
Ben
Labels:
ben model,
buster keaton,
egyptian theater,
robert morton,
theatre organ
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