They don’t make them like this anymore, kids. It’s deja vu all over again, as for the second time, I review a film titled IT’S A GIFT. This time, instead of W.C. Fields, this is the title of an earlier Hal Roach one reeler from Snub Pollard. You guys I’m sure remember Snub as Harold Lloyd’s main supporting player during the one reel and early two reel era. When Lloyd had his accident, Pollard was given his own series at Roach that lasted a few years. His career would be more bit parts after that and he even shows up with The Three Stooges a few times, going well into the Shemp era. He’s the telegram guy who gets knocked out in GENTS IN A JAM - the last Edward Bernds short, so yeah, like I said, well into the Shemp era.
Not quite a THREE’S A CROWD length essay this time because we get a nice simple one reel. The plot, what there is of it, involves Pollard delivering fire proof oil to a company and occasionally they focus on that. The main point of IT’S A GIFT and the reason why it’s stuck in my head all these years is the mechanical gags and that magnet powered rocket ship car Pollard rides.
The inventive devices Pollard uses to wake up from bed and to make breakfast have a SCARECROW and ELECTRIC HOUSE Keaton vibe to them - mechanically speaking. The catch here is that Pollard manipulates all these devices while in bed, so they’re a wonderful excuse for him to be lazy. I don’t know why, but there are shots of him in bed where he looks like Stan Laurel with a mustache, and I never thought that until now.
The rocket ship magnet powered car is the true highlight of the short and one of the memorable images of silent comedy. Pollard literally gets in a mini rocket ship and carries a huge magnet. The passing cars attract the magnet, powering the rocket ship to move. Pollard gets a lot of mileage, no pun intended, out if this gag. The short ends when he puts his oil in some cars which causes them to spin around like crazy and eventually people and cars are scattered on the streets and rooftops. This kind of thing only happens in silent comedy, which is why I’m a fan. A simple one reeler and a easy compared to the lengthy Martin and Lewis film in a couple of weeks. We’ll see how that goes!