Rodney wrote:The Douglas Fairbanks film The Mystery of the Leaping Fish has a frame story where Doug comes into the office -- I'm not sure if it's the producer or the director -- with an idea for a film. As he tells his idea, we see the film (easily one of the trippiest films of all time), and at the end the authority figure from the frame story tells him that no way is this film being made. Which, of course, it was. There's a W.C. Fields talkie with a similar kind of "star has a bad idea" framing.
The same basic premise, perhaps borrowed from Doug, was used in a Roach two-reeler from 1926 with the bizarre title
Don Key (Son of Burro), a play on the Fairbanks feature
Don Q, Son of Zorro, although the films were otherwise unrelated. Stuart Holmes is a screenwriter who relates his "bad idea" to producer Max Davidson, a disjointed tale involving Jimmy Finlayson, Vivien Oakland, some kids and a pet monkey. It makes no sense at all, and in the end Davidson throws Holmes out of his office.
From what I gather, the Finlayson/Oakland material was originally going to be a more conventional short, but it turned out so poorly it was considered a total bust. Supposedly it was Stan Laurel, working behind the scenes, who came up with the "bad scenario" framework, and saved the day. I wonder if Stan recalled seeing
The Mystery of the Leaping Fish, and decided to re-use the premise. And then, fifteen years later, perhaps W.C. Fields ran into difficulties with
Never Give a Sucker an Even Break, remembered seeing one of these things, and decided to try it yet again . . .