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Sherlock Jr.

Directed by Buster Keaton

The Balloonatic

Directed by Buster Keaton
Live Piano Accompaniment by Peter Freisinger
Screening on Film
  • Sherlock Jr.

    Directed by Buster Keaton.
    With Buster Keaton, Kathryn McGuire, Joe Keaton.
    US, 1924, 35mm, black & white, silent, 45 min.

The silent era’s most cinematic comedian, Keaton brilliantly merged slapstick humor (at once sophisticated and absurd), athleticism, a deadpan demeanor, and an understanding of the simultaneously mechanical and dream-like nature of the film medium. Andrew Sarris called Sherlock Jr. Keaton’s 8 ½, and the Surrealists also admired this unforgettable tale of a lovesick movie projectionist who dreams himself into the movie he is playing. Keaton’s ingenious visual effects play with cinema’s essential magic: its ability to (artificially) construct realistic temporal and spatial relationships—not to mention its influence on behavioral ideas, a power so enchanting that when the young projectionist awakes, his amorous interaction with his girlfriend is visibly inspired by the couples on the silver screen.

  • The Balloonatic

    Directed by Buster Keaton.
    With Buster Keaton, Phyllis Haver.
    US, 1923, 35mm, black & white, 23 min.

Keaton finds himself atop a balloon, lands in the wilderness, and encounters a young woman (Haver) camping nearby. Adventures ensue (and plenty of gags) as the two fend for themselves, Keaton all the while trying to win the girl’s affections.

Part of film series

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Eight Weeks of Film History:
1895 - 1939

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