I always thought there weren't enough great baseball slapstick routines. Abbott and Costello's "Who's On First," while brilliant, is verbal. The most famous slapstick baseball is probably the animated Bugs Bunny cartoon, BASEBALL BUGS. Take The Three Stooges, Chaplin, Lloyd, Laurel and Hardy, Langdon, Marx Brothers...not much baseball comedy. Keaton did it, most famously in an empty Yankee Stadium in THE CAMERAMAN, but also in this week's short. Keaton himself was a huge baseball fan and played lots of games with his crew over this years, so I imagine he enjoyed making this one. The formatting of a baseball game is of course inning by inning, so it was easy just to throw a random gag per inning, making the second baseball oriented half of this film episodic...just like a baseball game. Lots a fun little gags, like the exploding baseball, first base tied to the first basemen's foot, the broken bat throw to first, and the game ending drop kick into home plate that not even Pete Rose would dare! Really enjoyable, especially if you're a baseball fan.
The first half is good too, Keaton working a gas station in some deserted desert area, only to have Harold Goodwin build a competing gas station directly across. Watch Keaton's body movements in the beginning being startled as he picks himself off the chair and runs around. Very few people can make such mundane tasks look interesting, but Keaton's physical acting skills were among the best, and it shows here. I also love the routine concerning the competing gas prices, especially the way Keaton writes the number 18 and how going through all that trouble of lowering the price eventually backfires on him. Also love it when Keaton and Goodwin play pepper and Keaton basically gets his gas station destroyed. The gas station transforms into a wrecked creation on its own, but I can't help wish for a bigger budget here. Not bad for what Keaton was given, but compared to the angular Merry go round of a house in ONE WEEK, it doesn't quite compare.
The love angle doesn't take up too much time this short, but I'm not a fan of him trying to dust all over her in the car...just makes him look like a fool. As for Harold Goodwin, along with Dorothy Sebastian and Harry Myers, another actor slumming it out at Educational after previously doing bigger things. He previously worked at MGM and was even Keaton's on screen rival in FREE AND EASY. While I'll take ONE RUN ELMER over FREE AND EASY anyday of the week, no doubt the paycheck was better for Louie B. Mayer.