Funny you mention Metropolis....I saw Metropolis last week at the Ohio Theatre. I had never seen it before but it was a restored version with I think almost an extra hour of previous deleted material in it. Our organist, Clark Howard did a wonderful job playing along.
I only recently discovered Buster Keaton's work while attending The Cameraman at the Ohio Theatre....now I am hooked, I have read several books about him.
Now you'll
be hooked, in a positive and very enjoyable way. Buster influenced every single physical comedian who came after him, everyone from the Stooges to Red Skelton to even modern comics like Geoff Hoyle and Penn & Teller (Teller is a
very Buster-like character, what with his complete silence, poker face, and hazardous stunts). The similarity to the Stooges isn't an accident, either: Stooge writer/director Clyde Bruckman started out as Buster's collaborator on some of his funniest films.
My recommendations for anyone who's just getting into Keaton, more or less according to my own preferences:
Steamboat Bill Jr. (feature)
Daydreams (short)
The High Sign (short)
One Week (short)
The General (feature)
The Paleface (short)
The Garage (co-starring Fatty Arbuckle) (short)
And that's just for starters, on a very rich body of work.
As for "Metropolis," you probably saw the same print that's now available from Kino Video. It's an amazing job of restoration, considering that the film was basically in tatters, with a number of different chopped-up prints floating around, including that horrible 80's version with a disco musical (!?) score.
If anyone ever does a full remake, I want to play
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