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IMDbPro

His Royal Slyness

  • 1920
  • Passed
  • 27m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
902
YOUR RATING
Harold Lloyd in His Royal Slyness (1920)
ComedyShort

An American book salesman (Lloyd) is persuaded to go to the kingdom of Thermosa to impersonate the Prince. He is greeted by a peasants' revolt before the real prince shows up to claim his th... Read allAn American book salesman (Lloyd) is persuaded to go to the kingdom of Thermosa to impersonate the Prince. He is greeted by a peasants' revolt before the real prince shows up to claim his throne and princess. The revolution succeeds, and the American is elected president of the n... Read allAn American book salesman (Lloyd) is persuaded to go to the kingdom of Thermosa to impersonate the Prince. He is greeted by a peasants' revolt before the real prince shows up to claim his throne and princess. The revolution succeeds, and the American is elected president of the new republic.

  • Director
    • Hal Roach
  • Writer
    • H.M. Walker
  • Stars
    • Harold Lloyd
    • Mildred Davis
    • 'Snub' Pollard
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    902
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hal Roach
    • Writer
      • H.M. Walker
    • Stars
      • Harold Lloyd
      • Mildred Davis
      • 'Snub' Pollard
    • 15User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos12

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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Harold Lloyd
    Harold Lloyd
    • The American Boy
    Mildred Davis
    Mildred Davis
    • Princess Florelle of Thermosa
    'Snub' Pollard
    'Snub' Pollard
    • Prince of Roquefort
    • (as Harry Pollard)
    Gus Leonard
    • King Louis XIVIIX…
    Noah Young
    Noah Young
    • Count Nichola Throwe
    Marie Benson
    • Unidentified
    • (uncredited)
    Hal Berg
    • Guard
    • (uncredited)
    Roy Brooks
    Roy Brooks
    • Courtier
    • (uncredited)
    Sammy Brooks
      Ruth Feldman
      • Revolution Woman
      • (uncredited)
      William Gillespie
      William Gillespie
      • Courtier
      • (uncredited)
      • …
      Helen Gilmore
      Helen Gilmore
      • Queen of Thermosa
      • (uncredited)
      Max Hamburger
      • Guard
      • (uncredited)
      Estelle Harrison
      • Court Assistant
      • (uncredited)
      Joseph Hazelton
      Joseph Hazelton
      • Roquefort's Valet
      • (uncredited)
      Wally Howe
      Wally Howe
        Mark Jones
        Mark Jones
        • Guard
        • (uncredited)
        Dee Lampton
        • Noble
        • (uncredited)
        • Director
          • Hal Roach
        • Writer
          • H.M. Walker
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews15

        6.3902
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        Featured reviews

        8ksf-2

        harold lloyd the genius

        From the early comedy pros...harold lloyd and hal roach... a twenty two minute short. The cards along the way tell us much of the story, but two princes are vying for the hand of the eligible princess. When one of the prince's doesn't want to compete, he sends someone in his place. It's all very tongue in cheek! Harold lloyd situational humor, look-a-likes, ridiculous outfits, and even sillier wallpaper. The princess is played by millie davis, who lloyd had used in so many of his bits. And who he married in 1923. They were together until her death in 1969. The prince's double was played by Lloyd's older brother! It's quite well done! And fun. And just the right length. Good stuff. Currently showing on max and hulu!
        8lee_eisenberg

        All hail the silliness!

        Probably the most famous political satire from the inter-war era is the Marx Brothers' "Duck Soup". However, Harold Lloyd had starred in one a decade earlier. "His Royal Slyness" casts him as an ordinary guy who just happens to resemble the visiting prince of a foreign country. When the prince doesn't want to return home, Lloyd's character goes in his stead. Because the country has an incompetent, self-serving government, and the peasants are rising up against it, that doesn't make things any easier for poor Harold!

        This movie doesn't go for the jugular the way that "Duck Soup" did, but still sympathizes with the peasants (who wouldn't after seeing the worthless people who dominate the government?). It's no masterpiece but still a fun look at politics and the people's discontents therewith (which continue to this day).
        7wmorrow59

        His Majesty, the American

        His Royal Slyness, one of the best two-reel comedies Harold Lloyd made at the Hal Roach Studio, takes up a favorite theme in the pop culture of its day: the American who travels to an exotic land and somehow becomes King. He might be a lookalike for the real King, or an unwitting patsy surrounded by plotters, or a castaway believed to command supernatural powers. He may be a blank-faced innocent like Harry Langdon in Soldier Man, or a cheerful if accident-prone regular guy like Charley Chase in Long Fliv the King, each of whom comes to find that he rather enjoys the perks of monarchy but can't handle the palace intrigue. In Lloyd's version the court is corrupt, the peasants are getting angry, and it's time to make the kingdom safe for Democracy.

        These stories are usually set in fictional kingdoms, and often employ elements of social and political satire that would likely have been less acceptable to contemporary audiences if set in any recognizable place. The court depicted in His Royal Slyness is an amusingly jumbled patchwork of eras and cultures which mixes bits of Elizabethan, Victorian, and Mittel European costuming and decor, but the angry revolutionaries gathered in the village square are very definitely patterned after the era's Bolsheviks. The Russian Civil War was at its height in 1920, and American audiences were seeing people who looked like this in their newspapers and newsreels on a daily basis. Interestingly, despite the prevailing anti-Red sentiment in the U.S. at the time, the people responsible for this comedy seemed to take the angry protesters seriously, and didn't play them for easy laughs: there are no wild-eyed bomb-throwers, and no fleas in anyone's beard. The courtiers, on the other hand, are useless, decadent and drunk. We can only wonder if the filmmakers intended some sort of political commentary by casting character actor Gus Leonard as both "King Razzamatazz" and an angry, bedraggled orator outside the palace walls.

        When the story begins, Harold is a brash door-to-door salesman, a dead ringer for a dissolute Prince who is in America supposedly going to school. The Prince (played by Harold's real life older brother, Gaylord) is actually playing hooky and spending all his time with his vamp-y girlfriend, and doesn't feel like going home when he is summoned. Harold, who happens along at just the right moment, is persuaded, Prisoner of Zenda-style, to assume the Prince's identity and go in his place. Once he arrives in court, Harold tries to ingratiate himself with the chilly nobles, flirts with some cute pages (girls, of course), and then romances the Prince's fiancée. But the real Prince, having been jilted by his American mistress, returns, and Harold is tossed out. Almost immediately, and quite by accident, Harold finds himself leading the mob of rebels storming the palace. The monarchy is overthrown, Harold is installed as President, and, in one last political joke, immediately becomes a despot, and issues orders which are quickly and fearfully obeyed!

        Okay, so Jonathan Swift it ain't, but His Royal Slyness is a highly enjoyable comedy with undeniable elements of political satire. While it's not as laugh-packed as Charley Chase's Long Fliv the King (which in my opinion is the funniest of these mythical kingdom shorts), it is nonetheless amusing and surprisingly sharp, and also presents a good sample of Harold Lloyd's evolving comic style. The star himself comes off quite well here: he's young, trim, and decidedly more flirty with the ladies than the later, girl-shy Harold. The supporting cast features such Lloyd stalwarts as Snub Pollard, Noah Young, and Mildred Davis, who would later become Mrs. Harold Lloyd and retire from performing. The film is also interesting as a kind of dry run for the classic Why Worry? of 1923, in which Harold would once more fall afoul of violent plotters in an exotic foreign land.
        7jordondave-28085

        And some of those very same sight gags are still being used today

        (1920) His Royal Slyness SILENT COMEDY

        Clocking in at 27 minutes, it has a prince (Gaylord Lloyd) already romancing with one flame while a salesman (Harold Lloyd) is in another room trying to make a sale selling encyclopedias. And while the prince is romancing, the prince's count (Noah Young) then comes in to inform him he is subjected and ordered to marry the Princess Florelle of Thermosa. And by the time the book salesman was done, he then enters into the room of the prince romancing his current flame to which the prince notices both of them look almost identical. And then instead of him going to marry he then sends (Harold Lloyd) in his place. Some of the gags also includes some guardsmen unknowingly walking into the decoration water fountain; mistaken identity, and when he is chased by the guardsman. The second of 15 movies, Harold Lloyd starred with Mildred Davis. Actor Harry Pollard plays Harold Lloyd's rival for the princess hands.
        Snow Leopard

        Good Overall, With Some Very Funny Moments

        This Harold Lloyd comedy is good overall, and it has some especially funny moments. It's fun to see Harold and his brother Gaylord on screen together, and their characters are used to create a good story that lends itself to some good comedy. The rest of the cast of comic actors also help out when they have the chance.

        Lloyd plays an American salesman with a strong resemblance to a visiting prince (played by Gaylord), who asks the American to appear in his place for some duties at court. Much of the comedy comes from the contrast between the outgoing, aggressive American and the self-indulgent, oafish members of the royal court. It's enjoyable both as comedy and as social satire, and it's also rather interesting as a record of some perceptions that may not have changed all that much. The comedy blends slapstick, sight gags, and other material to make for a good mix.

        The revolution sequence brings things to an appropriate climax and ties everything together. Not all of the movie works flawlessly, but most of it is entertaining, and overall it's one of Harold Lloyd's more enjoyable short comedies.

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        Storyline

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        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          Harold Lloyd's lookalike, the Prince of Razzamatazz, is played by his older brother, Gaylord Lloyd, who is not credited.
        • Goofs
          The tapestries behind the king and queen appear to be Native American, not Mediterranean.

          The location of Razzamatazz and Thermosa is not specifically identified. Some hats appear to be mid-Eastern, Slavic, and Mediterranean; other attire, accessories, and palace furnishings could be from any number of geographic locations. This is simply a case of artistic interpretation of an unidentified foreign land.
        • Quotes

          Prince's Bodyguard: Our boat sails in an hour - railroad time.

        • Connections
          Remade as Long Fliv the King (1926)

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • February 8, 1920 (United States)
        • Country of origin
          • United States
        • Language
          • None
        • Also known as
          • Der falsche Prinz
        • Filming locations
          • Hal Roach Studios - 8822 Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA
        • Production company
          • Rolin Films
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          27 minutes
        • Sound mix
          • Silent
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.33 : 1

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