ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,6/10
2,5 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBy accident, Buster and an intimidating woman end up married.By accident, Buster and an intimidating woman end up married.By accident, Buster and an intimidating woman end up married.
Wallace Beery
- Photographer
- (uncredited)
Monte Collins
- The Father
- (uncredited)
Wheezer Dell
- Brother
- (uncredited)
Harry Madison
- Brother
- (uncredited)
Kate Price
- Kat - the Wife
- (uncredited)
Joe Roberts
- Brother
- (uncredited)
Tom Wilson
- Brother
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIncluded in "Buster Keaton: The Shorts Collection" blu-ray set, released by Kino.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Fractured Flickers: Paula Prentiss (1963)
Commentaire en vedette
Buster Keaton was often one to draw creative inspiration from his personal life. Frequently his love life, which was stormy and dramatic. Here's one such example: he married his first wife in 1921, and within a year he produced this short film, about a well-meaning sucker who's torn from his happy livelihood by a sudden marriage and an abhorrent set of greedy, oafish in-laws. The fictional version involves four large, bumbling brothers, as contrasted by his real bride's two sisters (all successful actresses), but it doesn't take much effort to read between the lines.
In this case, unfortunately, the personal connection doesn't result in many laughs. Buster is unjustly abused and exploited, despite his best efforts to make nice and blend in. Even when those good intentions don't backfire, his craftiness occasionally trumping his overwhelming bad luck, he's barely given a pat on the head before catching the persona non grata tag again and the whole dance begins anew.
It all culminates in a desperate chase, as many of Keaton's capers seem to, this one through a posh mansion and across the crowded roadways just outside. That's the sizzle of the film, another example of the expressive star's knack for repurposing everyday objects in acrobatic new ways, but it's brief and inconclusive. Satisfying climaxes sometimes seem optional in these brief comedies, but this one ends far more abruptly than most. Almost as if its star hadn't yet found an answer to his own similar, private entanglement.
In this case, unfortunately, the personal connection doesn't result in many laughs. Buster is unjustly abused and exploited, despite his best efforts to make nice and blend in. Even when those good intentions don't backfire, his craftiness occasionally trumping his overwhelming bad luck, he's barely given a pat on the head before catching the persona non grata tag again and the whole dance begins anew.
It all culminates in a desperate chase, as many of Keaton's capers seem to, this one through a posh mansion and across the crowded roadways just outside. That's the sizzle of the film, another example of the expressive star's knack for repurposing everyday objects in acrobatic new ways, but it's brief and inconclusive. Satisfying climaxes sometimes seem optional in these brief comedies, but this one ends far more abruptly than most. Almost as if its star hadn't yet found an answer to his own similar, private entanglement.
- drqshadow-reviews
- 20 sept. 2021
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Détails
- Durée24 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was My Wife's Relations (1922) officially released in Canada in English?
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