An ambitious coat-room checker impersonates an English nobleman.An ambitious coat-room checker impersonates an English nobleman.An ambitious coat-room checker impersonates an English nobleman.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win total
James T. Kelley
- Her Father
- (as James Kelly)
Sammy Brooks
- Guest
- (uncredited)
- Director
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Featured reviews
Poor Neil Doyle who switched off after half the film; he missed the best part of the movie - Lloyd with no trousers. How society has changed since the days when a man with bare legs was enough to send women into a faint (I write as I sit on the beach in just a pair of trunks!).
The scene the lion also comic gold. Was it Woody who reprised this scene with an octopus?
Not one of Lloyd's best but still enough great moments to make it worthwhile (although it does come as a shock when Lloyd's character is given the name O'Reilly at the end!).
The scene the lion also comic gold. Was it Woody who reprised this scene with an octopus?
Not one of Lloyd's best but still enough great moments to make it worthwhile (although it does come as a shock when Lloyd's character is given the name O'Reilly at the end!).
Mrs. O'Brien is desperate to have great European hunter Lord Abernathy for her high society party and a fox hunt. Her husband and her daughter are more interested in the simple life. The Society Pilot hires coat check boy O'Reilly (Harold Lloyd) to play the part of Abernathy.
This doesn't have the big stunt comedy of Lloyd's later full length hits. It's a short at around 35 minutes. He has some fun regaling in his imaginary exploits. There are some good slapstick. It's short which doesn't wear out its welcome. It's not terribly deep. Lloyd is honing his comedic skills. It's perfectly fine for a silent era comedy.
This doesn't have the big stunt comedy of Lloyd's later full length hits. It's a short at around 35 minutes. He has some fun regaling in his imaginary exploits. There are some good slapstick. It's short which doesn't wear out its welcome. It's not terribly deep. Lloyd is honing his comedic skills. It's perfectly fine for a silent era comedy.
This isn't one of Harold Lloyd's better films, it has to be said. He was at his best when delivering physical thrills and humour at breakneck speed, but there's precious little of it here. That's not to say Lloyd's humour couldn't be as effective when it was delivered at a more low-key level, but he needed to mix it up a little with his more dangerous stunts in order to get the cocktail right. Here he plays a bell boy who dreams of being a playboy, and gets the opportunity when he's offered the chance to pose as a wealthy aristocrat at a swanky social gathering. Unknown to Harold, the guy and his girlfriend who invited him are planning to scam the hostess out of her millions. The woman just happens to be the mother of Mildred Davis – an ever-present fixture in Lloyd's movies in those days – so naturally everything turns out alright in the end.
The second half of the film sees Harold losing his pants as he encounters a small zoo-load of animals: Skunks, snakes, bulls, goats, geese and dogs all try to take a bite out of our hero, and it's this part of the film that delivers the bulk of the laughs and prevents the film from being a complete flop.
The second half of the film sees Harold losing his pants as he encounters a small zoo-load of animals: Skunks, snakes, bulls, goats, geese and dogs all try to take a bite out of our hero, and it's this part of the film that delivers the bulk of the laughs and prevents the film from being a complete flop.
Newly wealthy James T. Kelly and daughter Mildred Davis may prefer the simpler things, but wife Aggie Herring is trying to cut a swath in society. So when an English lord can't be inveigled to come to their party, hat-check clerk Harold Lloyd is chosen to imitate him. His fantastic stories about hunting are received with such wide-eyed acceptance, he is also chosen to ride the wildest horse in the stables for the next day's fox hunt.
It's all an effort to marry Miss Davis for the family fortune. We are confident, of course, that Harold will thwart these efforts and marry Miss Davis himself -- they had been married in real life for three months when this film was released. In the meantime, there are plenty of gags to keep the audience very happy.
It's all an effort to marry Miss Davis for the family fortune. We are confident, of course, that Harold will thwart these efforts and marry Miss Davis himself -- they had been married in real life for three months when this film was released. In the meantime, there are plenty of gags to keep the audience very happy.
Harold Lloyd is a common bellhop at a ritzy Hotel, but he's good at impersonating the rich snobs who frequent the establishment. That talent gets him a chance to wear "glad rags" and mingle with the "swells," pretending to be a famous hunter. He's invited to this upper crust party and fox hunt. The real famous hunter didn't look suitable so a man who was assigned the job of asking the hunter to come to the party, invites Lloyd instead, telling him this is his chance to have some fun. Harold is okay with that. The invitee is really some "scumbag," as one reviewer here puts it, and is only interested in getting the daughter of the rich people to marry him so he can gain some money.
Anyway, after tasting the accidentally-spiked punch, gets hammered and tells a bunch of wild tales at the party. The more drinks he has, the better the stories. Some are pretty funny.
He's then asked to ride "Dynamite," the un-ridable horse, in the hunt. Slapstick then takes over for the rest of the movie as Harold attempts to ride the horse, then winds up being chased by a ram and a dog, loses his pants and tries to hide from everyone, on and on. Yes, a lot of these films didn't have much of a story, just a vehicle for the comedian to show us his talents. That's okay; that's what we like or we wouldn't watch these Lloyd or Buster Keaton and others' short films.
This film was so-so, to be honest. Nothing great, but not bad, either. The title cards in here were with cute drawings that were funny and a bit sarcastic were as good as the film.
Anyway, after tasting the accidentally-spiked punch, gets hammered and tells a bunch of wild tales at the party. The more drinks he has, the better the stories. Some are pretty funny.
He's then asked to ride "Dynamite," the un-ridable horse, in the hunt. Slapstick then takes over for the rest of the movie as Harold attempts to ride the horse, then winds up being chased by a ram and a dog, loses his pants and tries to hide from everyone, on and on. Yes, a lot of these films didn't have much of a story, just a vehicle for the comedian to show us his talents. That's okay; that's what we like or we wouldn't watch these Lloyd or Buster Keaton and others' short films.
This film was so-so, to be honest. Nothing great, but not bad, either. The title cards in here were with cute drawings that were funny and a bit sarcastic were as good as the film.
Did you know
- TriviaHarold Lloyd married his co-star Mildred Davis on 10 February 1923. They remained married until her death on 18 August 1969. They had three children.
- GoofsWhen The Boy (Harold Lloyd) comes across a lad eating in a field during the fox hunt, the salt shaker and food the boy has changes hands between shots.
- Quotes
Her Father: Out o' my house - Y' parrot-headed dudes an' *dudeens*!
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Big Show (1923)
Details
- Runtime
- 34m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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