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Never Weaken

  • 1921
  • Passed
  • 19m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
Mildred Davis and Harold Lloyd in Never Weaken (1921)
ComedyShortThriller

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.

  • Director
    • Fred C. Newmeyer
  • Writers
    • Hal Roach
    • Sam Taylor
    • H.M. Walker
  • Stars
    • Harold Lloyd
    • Mildred Davis
    • Roy Brooks
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    2.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fred C. Newmeyer
    • Writers
      • Hal Roach
      • Sam Taylor
      • H.M. Walker
    • Stars
      • Harold Lloyd
      • Mildred Davis
      • Roy Brooks
    • 27User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos53

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    Top cast15

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    Harold Lloyd
    Harold Lloyd
    • The Boy
    Mildred Davis
    Mildred Davis
    • The Girl
    Roy Brooks
    Roy Brooks
    • The Other Man
    Mark Jones
    Mark Jones
    • The Acrobat
    Charles Stevenson
    Charles Stevenson
    • The Police Force
    William Gillespie
    William Gillespie
    • The Doctor
    • (uncredited)
    Helen Gilmore
    Helen Gilmore
      Wally Howe
      Wally Howe
      • Man in Wheel Chair
      • (uncredited)
      Gaylord Lloyd
        Robert Emmett O'Connor
        Robert Emmett O'Connor
          George Rowe
          George Rowe
          • Cross-Eyed Henpecked Hubby
          • (uncredited)
          Molly Thompson
            Tiny Ward
              Joseph White
                Vera White
                  • Director
                    • Fred C. Newmeyer
                  • Writers
                    • Hal Roach
                    • Sam Taylor
                    • H.M. Walker
                  • All cast & crew
                  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

                  User reviews27

                  7.52.2K
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                  Featured reviews

                  7Bunuel1976

                  NEVER WEAKEN (Fred Newmeyer, 1921) ***

                  This is one of Harold Lloyd's best shorts and the second of his thrill comedies (in chronological order) to be included in this collection. The film can be neatly divided into three sections: the first sees Harold ingeniously gathering patients for the despondent clinic where his beloved, Mildred Davis, works (and which probably influenced Lloyd's later feature FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE [1926]); the second, as was the case with many a Lloyd comedy, he goes through several failed attempts at suicide (when he mistakes Mildred's clergyman brother for her lover!); the last third - and the undeniable highlight - has the star up to his neck in trouble when he ends up high in the air on a construction site (featuring some of Lloyd's most incredible stuntwork, the whole idea was borrowed by Laurel & Hardy for the second half of one of their most popular Silent shorts, LIBERTY [1929]).
                  bob the moo

                  The first half is rather amusing but the skyscraper routine in the second half makes it worth seeing

                  In a city full of skyscrapers a boy and a girl fall in love between window ledges. However their romance seems to be under threat when a lack of patients for her boss's doctor's surgery sees her told she'll be laid off. In order to keep his office hours relationship alive, the boy sets out to drum up some business and thus keep her job.

                  I've not seen enough Harold Lloyd to say whether or not I'm a massive fan but I have certainly never had any great desire to hunt his films down in the same way as I have with Laurel and Hardy (whom I generally adore). However with BBC4's consistently impressive Silent Clown's series of documentaries, I got a rare opportunity to see one of his shorts as selected by Paul Merton. The overly jaunty new score played over the film was a bit of a pain because although it fitted the action on screen, I didn't think it worked for the period the film came from. Regardless I got into the mild humour of Lloyd drumming up injuries on the streets as the film got going until it reached the high (sorry) point of the skyscraper conclusion. This section is pretty much the whole show as it demonstrates his daredevil sense of humour.

                  Sure he isn't actually 50 stories above the ground but the stunts are still very impressive let me assure you. His timing is good and although I didn't find this hilarious, he is impressive in how he plays the audience for laughs and gasps at the same time. The support cast all play to form but this is all about Lloyd and, considering I'm not a real fan, I did think he was well worth seeing.

                  Overall an impressive and amusing silent short film. Not as out and out funny as I would have hoped but the skyscraper scrapes are well worth seeing and make the second part of the film much stronger than the rather genial first half.
                  8motta80-2

                  Another delightful Lloyd/Davis film with some of the best of his trademark stunts

                  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.
                  8JoeytheBrit

                  Wish I'd been around to see it in '21...

                  This is comedy crafted from the material of nightmares, and Harold Lloyd (or his stunt double) displays a light-footedness and dexterity that is frankly quite astonishing. When you consider that Lloyd lost a thumb and finger when a supposedly dud prop bomb exploded in his hand just a year before this film was made it just adds to the courage he displays as he wobbles around on the narrow girders of a partially-constructed skyscraper hundreds of feet in the air. For my money, his stunts here far outshine those from Safety Last, the feature Lloyd made a couple of years later, in which he hangs from a clock on the side of a building.

                  The storyline isn't much to speak of, and the film is really two movies combined as the first half has little bearing on the second. Harold mistakenly believes his beloved (the future Mrs Lloyd, looking a little like Drew Barrymore in some shots) has fallen for another man and unsuccessfully tries to commit extravagant suicide with a gun and a length of string just as a stray girder from the construction project outside his office lifts the chair on which he is sat out of his office and into mid-air. The scenes in which Lloyd is perched on the chair are teeth-grindingly difficult to watch at times, and your laughter is really an hysterical release of tension rather than amusement at what is taking place on screen. I'd love to have seen this in a cinema back in 1921 – the audience reactions must have been something to see, and would have made the viewing experience all the more enjoyable.
                  8StevePulaski

                  Bravery and commitment to the highest degree as Lloyd goes out with a bang for the silent short era of his career

                  Harold Lloyd's Never Weaken finds itself notable for several reasons, more than just being Lloyd's final silent short before moving on to strictly feature-length productions. For one, the short was a pioneer of the silent genre known as "thrill-comedy," which blended the elements of slapstick and humor with aspects of a thriller, giving audiences moments to laugh and moments to gasp which, if done right, could give off complex feelings. Furthermore, a good chunk of this short features Lloyd atop a large construction sight, balancing on long, metal pillars, struggling to stay on, and hanging on for dear life in, which only proves more tantalizing when one realizes that Lloyd did all his own stunts for this short, refusing to wear a wire or a harness to further ensure safety and support.

                  The film stars Lloyd as an office-worker, who plans to wed the beautiful Mildred (Mildred Davis), whom has been his girlfriend for a long time now. However, after hearing a man say to her "of course I will marry you," without any context, the man becomes distraught, emotionally upset, and decides to commit suicide by blindfolding himself and rigging a gun to fire when he pulls a string that is tied to the trigger. After an odd and nearly unexplainable series of events, with the bullet hitting the light next to him, the man finds himself high above the city, atop a construction site, all of a sudden struggling to hold on for dear life.

                  Never Weaken illustrates the age-old idea of a misunderstanding, which has been put to great effect in comedy films and, as we see, even the early days of silent filmmaking. Being brewed from the classic misrepresentation makes for cute innovation, for the time, as we find ourselves one step ahead of the character with each turn, right from the core misunderstanding in the very beginning. Throw in Lloyd's incredible facial acting and unbelievably talented physical comedy, and this is a conglomeration of true talent and innovation you can't help but cheer on through and through.

                  Starring: Harold Lloyd and Mildred Davis. Directed by: Fred Newmeyer and Sam Taylor.

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                  Storyline

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                  Did you know

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                  • Trivia
                    Pioneering 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.
                  • Goofs
                    The 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.
                  • Quotes

                    The Girl: He can do anything he tries. Why, he even learned the names of all the vice presidents.

                  • Crazy credits
                    The 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.
                  • Connections
                    Featured in Hollywood (1980)

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                  Details

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                  • Release date
                    • October 22, 1921 (United States)
                  • Country of origin
                    • United States
                  • Language
                    • None
                  • Also known as
                    • Nur nicht schwach werden
                  • Filming locations
                    • Hill Street, Los Angeles, California, USA(construction site, above Hill Street tunnel)
                  • Production company
                    • Rolin Films
                  • See more company credits at IMDbPro

                  Tech specs

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                  • Runtime
                    • 19m
                  • Color
                    • Black and White
                  • Sound mix
                    • Silent
                  • Aspect ratio
                    • 1.33 : 1

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