https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0025003/I apologize for lousy quality of this YouTube video.
We enter the next phase of our journey with Harry Langdon's Columbia debut. Harry was a silent film legend who took a long time to adjust to sound. Much like Buster Keaton, he needed to find a new role as slow-paced pantomime fell flat in the sound era, more so than Buster's. Buster's character could be adapted to sound as his falls and smacks worked. Harry, however, developed a whole new persona based on his old one. This unsurprising as Harry had come from the prior sound era... that is, Vaudeville.
Harry jumps into Columbia style comedy with a bang. This is one of the wildest shorts I have ever seen from Columbia pictures. They really experimented in these early ones and sadly discarded a lot of good bits. Before I get into this review, just imagine Shemp Howard or Roscoe Arbuckle in this role; their characters work, but it would be funny in a different way!
The pre-code era allows for some crazy gags in this short. Poison, homosexuality, strangulation, sex, broken legs, and stomach pumping all are key moments in this short.
The opening is so strange, with Harry stroking his girlfriend in a very deliberate manner only to drop her like a brick. He does this smoothly and shamelessly in a truly caustic way... Darrow Langdon is too stupid to be genuinely harmful.
Earle Fox is fantastic as the defense attorney and Langdon's boss. Explosive rage is his strong suit, and it's well-needed here. When he's kissing Renee Whitney and Harry walks in... well, let's just say that due to circumstances Harry thinks his boss is gay.
Langdon strangles a woman, throws a brick at a cop (is that Stanley Blystone?), and drinks a bottle of poison before this one is done. But the ending sequence is both cringe-worthy and hilarious, though overdone. It's a wild ride to the finish, with this one being one of the most macabre and hilarious shorts ever produced by Columbia Shorts.
Don't worry, folks, this isn't the only short Arthur Ripley directed!
I could write more, but this one deserves you to see it for yourself.
10/10