CAPTAIN KIDD’S KIDS’ is the second short Harold Lloyd made in the two reel format and while it may not be one of the better ones, it is still a lot of fun. Out of the 13 two and three reel shorts Harold made, you will not find a stinker in the bunch. This would be the last Lloyd film for long time Lloyd leading lady Bebe Daniels. She would go on to have a very successful film career without Harold and it’s crazy to think she was only 18 here.
The plot of this one is pretty basic. Lloyd wakes up drunk from his bachelor party on the day he is supposed to marry Bebe Daniels. Bebe calls Harold to inform him her mother heard about the party and is calling off the wedding as a result. Harold is informed Bebe and her mother are off to the Canary Islands, so Harold, with butler Snub Pollard, board a ship to find her. After getting into a confrontation with robbers, Harold and Snub are thrown overboard, only to find a ship with female pirates. Bebe is on the ship and the captain is her mother. From this plot, everything flows logically, as things tend to do in all of Harold’s mature films. A lot of the Columbias and other silent comedians feel like bizarre fever dreams where I lose the plot and say, ‘What the Hell? Just go with it.” Here, it’s all pretty easy to follow and the gags flow logically from the situation.
My favorite bits? Harold sleeping with a block of ice on his hungover head while Snub Pollard tries to wake him is a lot of fun. The drowning gag between Snub and the janitor is great. They are underwater for an extremely long time where in real life, they would obviously be dead. Since this is a comedy, this obviously doesn’t happen and Harold takes his sweet and casual time before eventually getting them out. I do enjoy these underwater gags and another great example of one is in the Charley Chase one reeler ALL WET (1924).
Once on the ship, there is a real nice gag where Harold is feeding the girls bowls of soup. He has the bowls lined up on a plank where he can wash them with a spray and feed a bunch of girls at one time. A very cool gag and an idea that would be explored further by Buster Keaton in THE SCARECROW (1920). There’s a fun bit with Harold playing the ukulele and the pirate girls dance and the end of the pirate scene climaxes in a great slapstick chase fight. Overall a very fun film.