Produced and directed by Al Christie. Al Christie is a name only known to the most knowledgable silent comedy fans these days, but in the silent era he was up there with Mack Sennett and Hal Roach in success and fame level. Christie Comedies, based on what I've read and what little I've seen, tend to be more situational comedies and less surreal clowns. Bobby Vernon is the type of comedian who worked with Christie, and I have personally seen CHARLEY'S AUNT (1925), a feature starring Sydney Chaplin, Charlie's half brother. I'm not exactly well versed in the Christie style like I am Sennett, so it's hard for me to compare how this short falls into the Christie style like I could compare with Keaton's Sennett collaboration, but Keaton is, for the first and only time, working with another notable name here. I also like this short better than the Sennett one.
The more I watch these things, the more I'm enjoying Keaton's dry, dead pan, down to Earth vocal delivery. He's very matter of fact in his responses, I love the way he responds to the crooks when they mention they better get in before it rains for (spoiler alert) fear of explosion, for example. I'm warming up to talking Keaton when doesn't make his character overly dumb or love sick - you know, too Elmer like. This week, no problems in that area.
No gags that will blow you away, but there doesn't need to be, the whole powder creations lend to some creativity and fun. The love potion and chocolates predict THREE MISSING LINKS a bit and the scene with the girl in the car falling for Keaton as the boyfriend comes out is a highlight, a great Keaton "experiment." The breakfast gag is pleasant, and the noiseless explosive powder gets some good mileage. "Now we can have war in peace" is a great line, funny what the scientists consider useful - war. Before that, Keaton's inventions were considered useless to them. The way Keaton holds up the crooks by (spoiler alert), throwing the explosive powder on them and threatening to spray them with water to ignite the explosion is the clever Keaton we can expect from the silent days.
Another perfectly fine two reel comedy. I'll YouTube Al Christie this weekend, his short with Keaton is a nice effort, I'd love to see more when he's in his prime on a budget.