As far as Chase being forgotten, until recently his work was hard to find. All his thirties stuff is now available and his silent up to about 1926 or so are also. Ten, fifteen years ago, this wasn’t the case. It’s that 1927 - 1929 stuff that’s still hard to find and yes, Limousine Love, which I saw once and loved, falls into that category. Something tells me those years can possibly have Chase’s best stuff.
I reviewed Mighty Like A Moose a while back and all the Columbia shorts have been covered, but presently, HomokHarcos is chronologically doing the Chase silents starting with the Jimmy Jump one reelers on a weekly basis.
Well, although everything available today wasn't always available, at least not easily, back in the early 90s I bought 2 VHS tapes from Grapevine video with Chase silent shorts, which at this very moment I am holding in my hand. They contain:
BROMO AND JULIET
THE CARETAKER'S DAUGHTER
MIGHTY LIKE A MOOSE
LONG FLIV THE KING
HIS WOODEN WEDDING
CRAZY LIKE A FOX
In 1998, the first book-length study of Chase was published, "Smile When The Raindrops Fall: The Story of Charley Chase", co-written by Brian Anthony and Andy Edmonds (author of HOT TODDY). In it, like me, it mentions Blackhawk films, and for video, "Mail order video companies specializing in short comedies offer an impressive selection of Chase titles."
Circa 1996, "The World of Charley Chase" website was created by Yair Solan, who I believe was still in his teens. The website still exists. Even in 1996, Solan had seen and posted reviews of many Chase talkies and silents. In the 80s, many Chase talkies were included as extras on the Nostalgia Merchant video releases of Laurel and Hardy features.
In the 90s, a few Chase films were available on VHS in the LAUREL & HARDY & FRIENDS SERIES:
http://www.inkwellimagesink.com/pages/comedy/LaurelAndHardy.shtml In the early 90s, in a brick and mortar music and movies chain, I bought WHEN COMEDY WAS KING and THE GOLDEN AGE OF COMEDY, which included Chase segments. In the 80s, I taped LAUREL AND HARDY'S LAUGHING TWENTIES from TV, which contained a lot of Chase. In that same decade, American Movie Classics showed FOUR CLOWNS, which showed about half of LIMOUSINE LOVE.
In 2005, I taped the Charley Chase marathon on TCM that showed a total of 15 Chase silents. I still have the tape.
A bit before and after 2005, I was already taping Roach talkies from TCM, long before the DVDs came out. Around that time, I also bought from Amazon THE FURTHER PERILS OF LAUREL & HARDY, which contains some Chase clips. So between all that, plus my collection of his films on real film, I have never really had problems finding Chase films to watch. Have I seen every Chase film? No, but in time I will watch all available. There were (and might still be) most of the Roach and Columbia talkies that were released on DVD, or shown on TCM, on youtube, where you can often see the TCM logo on the screen.
The first Chase DVD of silents was released in 2004, 18 years ago:
http://charleychase.50webs.com/dvd.htmThat site also lists the availability, concentrating on real film and DVDs, but not VHS:
http://charleychase.50webs.com/extantfilms.htmJust skimming through it, I found a few inaccuracies, to the best of my knowledge:
- IT HAPPENED ONE DAY was only released by Blackhawk in 16mm. That's what all my catalogs show, and I have never seen it offered for sale in Super 8 or 8mm in over a quarter of a century of looking for it. I think I only saw it for sale on eBay once in 16mm, but unfortunately, I didn't win the auction.
- "Still available in 16mm from David Shepard" - David passed away in 2017, and stopped offering films in 16mm from his company, Film Preservation Associates/Blackhawk Films, in 2007. The company still exists, however:
https://www.fpa-blackhawk.com/This is sad:
1927-29 Two Reelers.
MGM releases, not public domain. Yet more classics during this golden period for Charley Chase. Sadly, the survival rate drops to just over 50%, and several of these comedies only seem to exist in fragmented form.
THE STING OF STINGS (1927) (aka A TREAT FOR THE BOYS) Golden Era Films: 16mm
THE LIGHTER THAT FAILED (1927)
THE WAY OF ALL PANTS (1927) [fragment] Films of Laurel & Hardy Volume 6
US (1927)
NEVER THE DAMES SHALL MEET (1927) [only surviving fragment appears in Robert Youngson's compilation film FOUR CLOWNS]
ACHING YOUTHS (1928)
THE FAMILY GROUP (1928) [only surviving fragment appears in Robert Youngson's compilation film FOUR CLOWNS]
LIMOUSINE LOVE (1928) still available in 16mm from David Shepard, Kinowelt Laurel & Hardy Vol. 22
ALL PARTS (1928) [may not survive complete]
MOVIE NIGHT Blackhawk: 8mm, Super8mm, still available from David Shepard in 16mm
Kinowelt Laurel & Hardy Vol. 20
Lost MGM Two-Reelers (1928-1929).
The biggest hole in the Charley Chase canon is comprised of his late '20s two-reelers released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. MGM was not nearly as involved as Pathe was in releasing the films they distributed to the home viewing market, and coupled with the growing interest in sound films during this transitional era for the film industry, this results in a very low survival rate for these films. Judging by the high quality work evident in the scant number of comedies Chase produced during this period that do survive ("Limousine Love", "Movie Night") the unavailability of these films is downright tragic - the discovery of a print of any of the following shorts would be a monumental find.
ALL FOR NOTHING (1928) [lost]
THE FIGHT PEST (1928) [lost]
IMAGINE MY EMBARRASSMENT (1928) [lost]
IS EVERYBODY HAPPY? (1928) [lost]
CHASING HUSBANDS (1928) [lost]
THE BOOSTER (1928) [lost]
RUBY LIPS (1929) [lost]
OFF TO BUFFALO (1929) [lost]
LOUD SOUP (1929) [lost]
THIN TWINS (1929) [lost]