IMDb RATING
7.5/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
A man hits the streets with a scheme to keep his fiancé from losing her job, however, things quickly go from bad to worse.A man hits the streets with a scheme to keep his fiancé from losing her job, however, things quickly go from bad to worse.A man hits the streets with a scheme to keep his fiancé from losing her job, however, things quickly go from bad to worse.
William Gillespie
- The Doctor
- (uncredited)
Wally Howe
- Man in Wheel Chair
- (uncredited)
George Rowe
- Cross-Eyed Henpecked Hubby
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPioneering stuntman Harvey Parry doubled for Harold Lloyd in several of the most dangerous shots in this and other Harold Lloyd films; only after the death of Lloyd (who was always said to do his own stunts) did Parry "go public" about his involvement.
- GoofsThe boy rips off a loosely thread button from his suit jacket and spills the glass of poison. His jacket is still missing the button up to when he is sitting in his chair awaiting the janitor to open the office door. However, when he is sitting on the chair on the girder, his jacket has regained the missing button, and it remains for the rest of the film.
- Crazy creditsThe cast title page is headed "Just passing by". Below the cast list: The Plot - a youth of twenty-one and a maid of eighteen. Shakespeare couldn't have asked for more.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hollywood (1980)
Featured review
Never Weaken came a year after the brilliant Haunted Spooks and touches on some of the same ideas but plays in a very different ways, including featuring an extended sequence of the stunning stunt-work best associated with Lloyd.
Where Keaton had his dour expression and acrobatics and Chaplin had the pathos and funny walk of the tramp Lloyd is best remembered for his effervescence and his stunts. The stunts are never better represented than here which sees a protracted, thrilling and funny scene when Harold finds himself stranded on the beams of a building under construction. One gag in this sequence involving a ladder is as good as they come but the whole sequence is a delight.
It might surprise people that a key theme here involves attempted suicide, something Keaton often tackled, but is less associated with the happy-go-lucky Lloyd, but it was something he visited on multiple occasions. Perfectly demonstrating what a fine line exists between comedy and tragedy this scene here explores the banalities that intrude and the difficulties of going through with such an act that when dwelt on are extremely astute but while watched are hilarious. The suicidal scenes of Haunted Spooks have bigger, and funnier gags and this is one extended scene here instead of a series of vignettes but still inspired as Harold figures out how to do it, dismissing various ways for funny, but oddly real reasons. The sequence is at it's best though when he delays the act because he gets caught up in the triviality of a miss-spelling in his suicide note! Lloyd regular (and later his wife) Mildred Davis again appears as the love interest, though has little to do here compared to some.
The film is intriguingly split into three distinct segments, the slapstick laughs of the first section where Harold is trying to get patients for the doctor Mildred works for so she won't be fired; the smart wit of the suicidal second section; and then the thrilling stunts of the final section. Whichever part of Lloyd's art you like best Never Weaken can offer it to you, however as a whole it does feel a little like 3 10 minute shorts playing one after the other.
Typically the title cards remain the most inspired and beautiful of any US silent comedian.
Well worth catching. If you don't know Lloyd you couldn't get a better introduction to his talents.
Where Keaton had his dour expression and acrobatics and Chaplin had the pathos and funny walk of the tramp Lloyd is best remembered for his effervescence and his stunts. The stunts are never better represented than here which sees a protracted, thrilling and funny scene when Harold finds himself stranded on the beams of a building under construction. One gag in this sequence involving a ladder is as good as they come but the whole sequence is a delight.
It might surprise people that a key theme here involves attempted suicide, something Keaton often tackled, but is less associated with the happy-go-lucky Lloyd, but it was something he visited on multiple occasions. Perfectly demonstrating what a fine line exists between comedy and tragedy this scene here explores the banalities that intrude and the difficulties of going through with such an act that when dwelt on are extremely astute but while watched are hilarious. The suicidal scenes of Haunted Spooks have bigger, and funnier gags and this is one extended scene here instead of a series of vignettes but still inspired as Harold figures out how to do it, dismissing various ways for funny, but oddly real reasons. The sequence is at it's best though when he delays the act because he gets caught up in the triviality of a miss-spelling in his suicide note! Lloyd regular (and later his wife) Mildred Davis again appears as the love interest, though has little to do here compared to some.
The film is intriguingly split into three distinct segments, the slapstick laughs of the first section where Harold is trying to get patients for the doctor Mildred works for so she won't be fired; the smart wit of the suicidal second section; and then the thrilling stunts of the final section. Whichever part of Lloyd's art you like best Never Weaken can offer it to you, however as a whole it does feel a little like 3 10 minute shorts playing one after the other.
Typically the title cards remain the most inspired and beautiful of any US silent comedian.
Well worth catching. If you don't know Lloyd you couldn't get a better introduction to his talents.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Nur nicht schwach werden
- Filming locations
- Hill Street, Los Angeles, California, USA(construction site, above Hill Street tunnel)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime19 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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