IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
The comic adventures of a new car owner.The comic adventures of a new car owner.The comic adventures of a new car owner.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
William Gillespie
- Dope Fiend
- (uncredited)
Wally Howe
- Wedding Guest
- (uncredited)
Ernest Morrison
- Small Boy
- (uncredited)
Bob O'Connor
- Photographer
- (uncredited)
Frank Terry
- Neighbor in garden
- (uncredited)
Bobbie West
- Woman
- (uncredited)
Noah Young
- Swordsman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I have a production still in which Harold Lloyd and producer/director Hal Roach are obviously having an enjoyable time embellishing a shooting script with gag after gag. Employing a cast as long as the memo Hal is holding, "An Eastern Westerner" incorporated more production values than the average feature.
What's more, Hal Roach's smoothly expansive direction certainly gives the lie to the often-repeated claim that as a director, he was second-rate.
If another proof of the absurdity of this claim was needed, you have only to look at another of Lloyd's 1920 two-reelers, namely this "Get Out and Get Under". This short is a superbly orchestrated and timed little comedy in which no expense seems to have been spared.
The camera really moves when appropriate and all the action is brilliantly staged.
Indeed, one of Lloyd's favorite props, a streetcar, figures in the action and the cast includes wonderful Sunshine Sammy Morrison who shares some hilarious "business" with Lloyd.
What's more, Hal Roach's smoothly expansive direction certainly gives the lie to the often-repeated claim that as a director, he was second-rate.
If another proof of the absurdity of this claim was needed, you have only to look at another of Lloyd's 1920 two-reelers, namely this "Get Out and Get Under". This short is a superbly orchestrated and timed little comedy in which no expense seems to have been spared.
The camera really moves when appropriate and all the action is brilliantly staged.
Indeed, one of Lloyd's favorite props, a streetcar, figures in the action and the cast includes wonderful Sunshine Sammy Morrison who shares some hilarious "business" with Lloyd.
The Boy (Harold Lloyd) is getting his picture taken and it does not go well. He is proposing to The Girl (Mildred Davis), but the photographer tells him that she is marrying The Rival (Fred McPherson) that day. He is too late. Luckily, it's all a dream, but he's late for a theatrical performance. He gets in his car, but it's an eventful drive.
I would have liked to see this story without the dream reveal. It is a 25 minutes short so I don't know if he has the time to break up the married couple. I would like to see him try. This short ends up being a lot of car gags. It's fun, but the story can be anything if all Harold wants are car gags. Diving in to fix the engine is a fun visual gag. I'm sure they removed the engine to do that one. He is just breaking the law when he runs from the cops.
I would have liked to see this story without the dream reveal. It is a 25 minutes short so I don't know if he has the time to break up the married couple. I would like to see him try. This short ends up being a lot of car gags. It's fun, but the story can be anything if all Harold wants are car gags. Diving in to fix the engine is a fun visual gag. I'm sure they removed the engine to do that one. He is just breaking the law when he runs from the cops.
Fair Harold Lloyd short which presents several gags he would re-use and improve upon in his later feature films. It opens with a scene at a photographer's studio where Harold discovers that his girl Mildred Davis is about to marry another man - but it all turns out to have been just a dream. He's involved in amateur theatricals and, being late for a performance, rushes out to the venue in his beloved car: amid the vehicle's breaking down on him, he falls foul of an elderly neighbor and a colored child; the race-against-time, then, culminates in the usual pursuit by a horde of policemen. The automobile trouble eventually gets a bit repetitive, but the film nevertheless includes the occasional inspired and hilarious gag - such as when Harold 'disappears' inside the car's engine compartment, an actor accidentally falling off the stage (after being 'killed') promptly going back up to resume his performance i.e. affecting a typically melodramatic 'exit' and, especially, when Lloyd sees a junkie getting high in the street and reasons that, if he injects his vehicle with the same substance, it will be likewise revitalized - which is what happens, as the car goes off on its own soon after 'taking' its fix!
This is a good Harold Lloyd comedy that gets plenty of mileage out of the material, and it has quite a few amusing moments. It is one of many silent comedies that take one situation and then stretch it out as far as possible.
The top silent comedians such as Lloyd could often find quite a variety of possibilities in a simple premise.
In this case, most of the story has Harold in a desperate rush to get where he is going. The number of obstacles he encounters is pretty creative, from the expected, such as an uncooperative automobile, to unexpected obstacles such as a friendly little boy and a cute dog. There is some decent slapstick, and there are also some good sight gags, a couple of which might be the movie's best moments. It works pretty well overall.
The top silent comedians such as Lloyd could often find quite a variety of possibilities in a simple premise.
In this case, most of the story has Harold in a desperate rush to get where he is going. The number of obstacles he encounters is pretty creative, from the expected, such as an uncooperative automobile, to unexpected obstacles such as a friendly little boy and a cute dog. There is some decent slapstick, and there are also some good sight gags, a couple of which might be the movie's best moments. It works pretty well overall.
(1920) Get Out and Get Under
COMEDY
Harold Lloyd playing a boy part of a theater play, the first few minutes is a dream sequence where he is told his dream girl is already been married, and stumbles on to it. Only then as soon as he wakes up, he realizes he is late as the led actor as the prince. And of course, it does not run smoothly upon his drive toward there. One of the many slapstick's also include his run ins with trafficking cops while driving. And his problems with a young curious child such as making him think that he got the car to work by standing on the side and moving it up and down and upon him fixing it. This is the seventh of fifteen movies Harold Lloyd starred with actress Mildred Pierce.
Harold Lloyd playing a boy part of a theater play, the first few minutes is a dream sequence where he is told his dream girl is already been married, and stumbles on to it. Only then as soon as he wakes up, he realizes he is late as the led actor as the prince. And of course, it does not run smoothly upon his drive toward there. One of the many slapstick's also include his run ins with trafficking cops while driving. And his problems with a young curious child such as making him think that he got the car to work by standing on the side and moving it up and down and upon him fixing it. This is the seventh of fifteen movies Harold Lloyd starred with actress Mildred Pierce.
Did you know
- TriviaThe title, "Get Out and Get Under," comes from a popular 1913 song, "He'd Have To Get Under - Get Out And Get Under (To Fix Up His Automobile)" (Music by Maurice Abrahams; Lyrics by Grant Clarke and Edgar Leslie). Robert Israel's score in the 2004 alternate version frequently uses melodies from this song.
- GoofsWhen Harold chases the little boy at 14:55, he slips on the banana peel once again, but his foot never actually touches the peel.
- Quotes
Title Card: The Boy is in love with The Girl and - the rest just happens.
- Alternate versionsIn 1995, The Harold Lloyd Trust copyrighted a 25-minute version with a musical score synchronized by Vince Giordano and played by Vince Giordano and The Nighthawks. The print also adds new production credits totaling and additional minute.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The American Road (1953)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Get Out & Get Under
- Filming locations
- Palms, Los Angeles, California, USA(Harold's car breaks down)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 25m
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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