Wed Mar 14, 2012 2:54 pm
New York, NY - March 14, 2012 - Following the release of eight of Buster Keaton's acclaimed silent feature-length comedies (plus all 19 of his independently-produced silent shorts) in the Blu-ray format, Kino Classics is proud to announce the Blu-ray debut of Lost Keaton, a collection of all sixteen short subjects that the great comedian made for Educational Pictures between 1934 and 1937. This collection of rare films offers a fascinating look at how Keaton creatively adapted his unique brand of slapstick comedy for talking pictures.
Lost Keaton comes to Blu-ray on March 20th with special features including extensive film notes by David Macleod, author of The Sound of Buster Keaton, a stills gallery, and "Why They Call Him Buster", a montage of pratfalls and stunts excerpted from Keaton's Educational comedies. All sixteen films are mastered in HD from original 35mm archival materials. The SRP is $39.95.
In 1934, Buster Keaton signed on with Earle W. Hammons' Educational Pictures ("The Spice of the Program"), which had specialized in short comedy subjects since the 1920s. During Educational's heyday, many established and rising comic talents would work for the studio, including Mack Sennett, Bob Hope and Danny Kaye.
Educational proved to be a good match for Keaton's talents. The return to the two-reel comedy format marked a return for Keaton to his cinematic roots. Working at Educational allowed Keaton to craft a series of short subjects in rapid succession (creating sixteen shorts in just three years) that pay homage to his earlier work, and also allow Keaton to explore his new comic persona, "Elmer".
Though the budgets for these films may have been small (budgeted at $20,000 each), Keaton's rich creative talents are present in each one and are reminiscent of his silent classics. One Run Elmer features a celebrated baseball game sequence, and Grand Slam Opera is generally regarded as the best of the series, as well as Keaton's favorite of his Educational comedies.
The films also feature some of Keaton's favorite supporting players. Allez Oop co-stars Dorothy Sebastian, with whom Keaton had worked in his silent feature, Spite Marriage. Harold Goodwin (who would work with Keaton a number of times throughout his career) appears in One Run Elmer. And Keaton's parents (Joe and Myra) co-star in Palooka from Paducah.
Keaton would work with top tier talent behind the camera at Educational as well. Twelve of the films were directed by Charles Lamont, a childhood friend of Keaton's from their days in vaudeville (and who would later direct comedy series at Universal including some of the Abbott & Costello and the Ma & Pa Kettle films). The Chemist was directed by pioneer comedy producer Al Christie, and The Timid Young Man marks the only time that Keaton would be directed by the legendary Mack Sennett.
Long unavailable, Keaton's films for Educational were too frequently dismissed or ignored outright. Reappraisal came from critics such as Leonard Maltin, who wrote of Keaton's Educational comedies in his book The Great Movie Shorts: "Legend has it that Buster Keaton's career started sliding downhill in 1930 and never stopped - that his talkie films are unspeakable horrors...The talking films, however, still exist, and they disprove what has been said for so many years. To be sure, they are not in the same league as Keaton's silents, but they show a comic talent very much alive."
Because they were produced outside the studio system, these "orphan" films were saved from obscurity by Keaton himself late in his life, in cooperation with archivist Raymond Rohauer. Because they were rescued from a variety of sources, the quality varies considerably from battered to pristine. Kino Classics' release of these sixteen short comedies in the Blu-ray format makes them available again, in the best possible quality, so that audiences can see for themselves the range and skill of Keaton's talent at adapting his brilliant and timeless brand of slapstick comedy for the sound film medium.
List of All Films Included in Lost Keaton:
The Gold Ghost (1934, 21 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
Allez Oop (1934, 20 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
Palooka from Paducah (1935, 20 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
One Run Elmer (1935, 19 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
Hayseed Romance (1935, 20 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
Tars and Stripes (1935, 20 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
The E-Flat Man (1935, 20 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
The Timid Young Man (1935, 20 min., dir: Mack Sennett)
Three on a Limb (1936, 18 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
Grand Slam Opera (1936, 20 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
Blue Blazes (1936, 19 min., dir: Raymond Kane)
The Chemist (1936, 19 min., dir: Al Christie)
Mixed Magic (1936, 16 min., dir: Raymond Kane)
Jail Bait (1937, 19 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
Ditto (1937, 17 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
Love Nest on Wheels (1937, 18 min., dir: Charles Lamont)
Special Features
Film Notes by David Macleod, author of The Sound of Buster Keaton
Stills Gallery
"Why They Call Him Buster," a montage of pratfalls and stunts
Lost Keaton
(Blu-ray)
Genre: Comedy
SRP: $39.95
Street date: March 20, 2012