An Eastern Westerner
Brief Synopsis
In this silent film, a pampered East Coat lad is sent west to be toughened up.
Cast & Crew
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Hal Roach
Director
Harold Lloyd
Mildred Davis
Noah Young
Suzanne Lloyd Hayes
Producer
Walter Lundin
Cinematographer
Film Details
Genre
Silent
Comedy
Family
Short
Western
Release Date
1920
Technical Specs
Duration
24m
Synopsis
In this silent film, a pampered East Coat lad is sent west to be toughened up.
Director
Hal Roach
Director
Film Details
Genre
Silent
Comedy
Family
Short
Western
Release Date
1920
Technical Specs
Duration
24m
Articles
An Eastern Westerner
It's Harold to the rescue as he saves the father, falls in love with the girl and does battle with a Western version of the Ku Klux Klan. The final chase has some classic Lloyd moments as Harold eludes his hooded assailants -- at one point hiding in a skirt that hangs from a clothesline.
The heroine is played by Mildred Davis, Lloyd's frequent leading lady, who would soon marry him and retire to raise their family. Lloyd would later say of producer/director Hal Roach, his most significant collaborator: "He wasn't actually a very good director. [But] he had fortitude, he had drive, and he had worlds of confidence... There was a sort of affinity between Hal and myself. He used to say, 'No matter what the scene is that I think up, Lloyd has the knack of putting it on the screen the way I visualize it.' Roach was very creative, he was a very good gagman, and he had great courage."
Producer/Director: Hal Roach
Screenplay: Frank Terry, H.M. Walker (titles)
Cinematography: Walter Lundin
Original Music: Robert Israel
Principal Cast: Harold Lloyd (The Boy), Mildred Davis (The Girl), Noah Young (Tompkins, the Bully).
BW-24m.
by Roger Fristoe
An Eastern Westerner
The two-reel Harold Lloyd comedy An Eastern Westerner
(1920) is a Western spoof in which the daredevil comic plays a
rich, spoiled young New Yorker whose parents ship him off to his
uncle's ranch in rootin'-tootin' Piute Pass to correct his high-
living city ways. Harold soon has a confrontation with a
lecherous bully called "Tiger Lip" Tompkins (Noah Young) who is
trying to have his way with a virtuous young woman after locking
up her sickly father.
It's Harold to the rescue as he saves the father, falls in love
with the girl and does battle with a Western version of the Ku
Klux Klan. The final chase has some classic Lloyd moments as
Harold eludes his hooded assailants -- at one point hiding in a
skirt that hangs from a clothesline.
The heroine is played by Mildred Davis, Lloyd's frequent leading
lady, who would soon marry him and retire to raise their family.
Lloyd would later say of producer/director Hal Roach, his most
significant collaborator: "He wasn't actually a very good
director. [But] he had fortitude, he had drive, and he had worlds
of confidence... There was a sort of affinity between Hal and
myself. He used to say, 'No matter what the scene is that I think
up, Lloyd has the knack of putting it on the screen the way I
visualize it.' Roach was very creative, he was a very good
gagman, and he had great courage."
Producer/Director: Hal Roach
Screenplay: Frank Terry, H.M. Walker (titles)
Cinematography: Walter Lundin
Original Music: Robert Israel
Principal Cast: Harold Lloyd (The Boy), Mildred Davis (The
Girl), Noah Young (Tompkins, the Bully).
BW-24m.
by Roger Fristoe