Pete Prindle wins the affections of Christine Cadwalader, but the father of the girl demands that Pete shall get a half interest in his father's food product company before he is allowed to ... Read allPete Prindle wins the affections of Christine Cadwalader, but the father of the girl demands that Pete shall get a half interest in his father's food product company before he is allowed to marry her. Pete accepts the ultimatum. Proteus Prindle, father of Pete, is angry when he r... Read allPete Prindle wins the affections of Christine Cadwalader, but the father of the girl demands that Pete shall get a half interest in his father's food product company before he is allowed to marry her. Pete accepts the ultimatum. Proteus Prindle, father of Pete, is angry when he receives the request from his son. He shows how his two girls have broken into print with a... Read all
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- Terry McGovern - Referee
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- One of the Weazels
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Featured reviews
How to get into the headlines...
So - in Doug Fairbanks' third film (after "The Lamb", and "Double Trouble", which unfortunately is lost) we can witness our young hero again breaking almost all the rules of 'society', pulling the most hilarious gags, and of course showing a VERY fine display of his wonderful acrobatics (including his considerable boxing skills!) - which shows us once more: a steak IS more nutritious than mere cereals...
And this is not only a GREAT comedy, full of Doug's eternally optimistic spirit, but also a VERY valuable time document from (seen from the US point of view) pre-WWI days - note the 'Tin Lizzies', the old-fashioned steam trains, the clothes people wore almost exactly 100 years ago... It'll take you into a totally different era!
Ain't he the reel star?
Considering it's a Douglas Fairbanks film, I was a bit disappointed.
Fairbanks plays Peter Prindle. His family has made their fortune selling vegetarian foods--much like the Kellogg's family. However, Peter thinks it's all nonsense and is seen sneaking off to buy himself a steak! In a similar situation is a girl he wants to marry--as her family is also into the vegetarian lifestyle and works with Peter's dad. However, her father isn't about to let the pair marry because Peter is a ne'er-do-well--and is known for showing up late to work and not taking the business seriously. In order to even consider letting the pair marry, Peter's been told he must get himself into the newspaper--thus drawing attention to the business. However, try as he might, again and again, he cannot get himself in the paper. Several of these attempts are funny--but several SHOULD have been a lot funnier and overall these attempts are pretty uneven. Naturally, however, by the end, Peter proves himself and gets the girl. This portion of the film is by far the best, as Fairbanks is in his element--doing some amazing stunt work.
By the way, at the end, look carefully at the Weazels (a group of extortionists)--one of them is Erich von Stroheim!
Establishing Doug's Pace and Voice
Alistair Cooke ("Douglas Fairbanks: the making of a screen character") praised Emerson and Loos for "a willingness to let Fairbanks's own restlessness set the pace of the shooting and his gymnastics be the true improvisations on a simple scenario." Indeed, there is plenty of fast-paced editing here—sometimes the shot successions are too quick, I think. The train gag seemed especially choppy. Yet, I generally prefer a bit too quick to some of the lethargic early features. There's an especially good match cut where Doug gets out of bed cut to his purchasing an automobile. Additionally, the scenario provides Doug with the usual romance and a goal (this time, an ironic effort by him struggling to attract publicity), which prominently feature his athleticism, seemingly effortless acrobatics, boyish masculinity, and smile. As in some of his later vehicles (e.g. "Wild and Woolly", "Reaching for the Moon"), he's trapped in a dull office job and effeminizing modern society; in this one, he secretly indulges in carnivorism while trying to sell his father's vegetarian product, and when he kisses a girl, he does so on the mouth, instead of the "sanitary kiss" the Melville character gives by tapping a face with his fingers. "His Picture in the Papers", however, doesn't have as cohesive a scenario as some of Fairbanks's later pictures. The subplot of the girl's father's problems with the weasel gang, for example, should've been dropped.
In ranking Loos the 25th most influential person in film history, Scott Smith ("The Film 100") cites her work on "His Picture in the Papers" and her earlier work at Biograph under Griffith for introducing the role of dialogue cards (or intertitles) and her witty phrases for introducing satire to cinema. "She was the unspoken 'voice' of Lillian Gish, Mary Pickford, and Douglas Fairbanks," Smith said. In one title card, when Melville kisses the girl, it says, "Note the kiss": an example of Loos making a wisecrack directly to the audience. Another card calls attention to the movie being a movie: "Ain't he the REEL hero?" Loos wrote similarly revealing, self-referential winks in Fairbanks's other films. Title cards are especially plentiful in the film's introduction, which slow down the otherwise fast pace of shot successions.
"His Picture in the Papers" isn't the best of Fairbanks's modern comedies, but it's a good introduction to these films and, as somewhat the beginning of them, is historically interesting in tracing the evolution of Fairbanks's screen persona and the characteristics of his vehicles.
Smile for the camera
Did you know
- TriviaA copy of this film survives in The Library of Congress.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Man You Loved to Hate (1979)
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- En hustru med pressens hjälp
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- Budget
- $42,600 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 2m(62 min)
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- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1






