Cops


22m 1922

Brief Synopsis

In this silent film, a misunderstanding sends an entire city police force after a young man.

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Comedy
Short
Release Date
1922

Technical Specs

Duration
22m

Synopsis

In this silent film, a misunderstanding sends an entire city police force after a young man.

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Comedy
Short
Release Date
1922

Technical Specs

Duration
22m

Articles

Cops


Buster Keaton proved that paranoia can be funny in the Franz Kafka-like two-reel comedy, Cops (1922). Keaton plays an easy-going soul whose girlfriend refuses to have anything to do with him until he makes something of himself (a problem that also plagued Harold Lloyd in his pictures). Without any effort, Keaton seizes a golden opportunity: he pays a con artist for a horse and wagon that don't belong to him and aren't for sale. Then he ends up buying furniture that also isn't for sale. It just so happens to be owned by a cop.

So here's Buster, lazily guiding a wagon full of furniture, towards a future that will be pleasing to his girlfriend. Alas, things do not work out as planned. En route, Keaton inadvertently gets jammed in a policeman's parade. Thinking he should be looking his best, Keaton decides to light a cigarette. It's the classy thing to do, you know. Needing a match, Keaton finds a light that has plopped down next to him on the carriage. The "light" is actually the lit fuse of a bomb, thrown by an anarchist from a rooftop, intended to wreck havoc on the city's celebration. Keaton, oblivious to the danger, lights his smoke and casually throws away the bomb...right into a crowd of policemen. Thus sets off one of Keaton's most inventive short films, an epic chase that finds an innocent, if unobservant, man being pursued by hundreds of uniformed policemen. It's a situation worthy of Kafka but played for comedy.

What wasn't funny were the serious circumstances under which Keaton made Cops. At the time, his friend and mentor, Fatty Arbuckle, was undergoing a third trial for manslaughter (the first two trials ended in hung juries). Arbuckle was eventually exonerated, with an official apology from the jury, but his career was effectively over because of the negative publicity he attracted from the court case. Thus, Keaton's probable inspiration for Cops wasn't exactly a laughing matter.

The distributor for Cops was not particularly overjoyed either about the terrorist bomb sequence and how audiences would react to it. Just two years earlier, thirty people were killed and many more injured when an anarchist exploded a bomb on Wall Street. So public sensitivity was high regarding scenes of terrorist acts in movies but Cops didn't ignite any controversy over this subplot since Keaton kept the action moving too fast for audiences to really make any topical connections.

From beginning to end, the short is consistently hilarious and inspired with several famous scenes, especially one where Keaton is fleeing his pursuers. In long shot, Keaton runs towards the camera through an alleyway. He stops in the middle of a road, just as the cops are making their way through the alleyway. Just then, a car zooms by the hapless fugitive, and in the wink of an eye, Keaton grabs hold of the back of the car and is lifted into the air and out of the frame, now safely hitchhiking on the back of the speeding vehicle. In this age of digital trickery and fantastic stunt work by trained professionals, this stunt is still amazing, not just because it looks impossible to do with such effortless grace, but because Keaton "throws away" the gag. He doesn't draw attention to it, so don't blink or you'll miss it. Incidentally, Keaton may have gotten the idea from Arbuckle, who performed a variation of the stunt on a moving train in the 1918 short Out West.

Similar to the reality television show which shares its namesake, Keaton's Cops was filmed on the lively streets of Los Angeles, at the start of Keaton's most artistically rich decade. Keaton commands the southern California locale like it's his own backyard. For a wonderful tour of the many locations Keaton shot, check out the book Silent Echoes, by John Bengtson.

Producer: Joseph M. Schenck
Director: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton
Screenplay: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton
Cinematography: Elgin Lessley
Film Editing: Buster Keaton
Music: Gaylord Carter
Cast: Buster Keaton (The Young Man), Joe Roberts (Police Chief), Virginia Fox (Mayor's Daughter), Edward F. Cline (Hobo), Steve Murphy (Conman).
BW-22m.

by Scott McGee
Cops

Cops

Buster Keaton proved that paranoia can be funny in the Franz Kafka-like two-reel comedy, Cops (1922). Keaton plays an easy-going soul whose girlfriend refuses to have anything to do with him until he makes something of himself (a problem that also plagued Harold Lloyd in his pictures). Without any effort, Keaton seizes a golden opportunity: he pays a con artist for a horse and wagon that don't belong to him and aren't for sale. Then he ends up buying furniture that also isn't for sale. It just so happens to be owned by a cop. So here's Buster, lazily guiding a wagon full of furniture, towards a future that will be pleasing to his girlfriend. Alas, things do not work out as planned. En route, Keaton inadvertently gets jammed in a policeman's parade. Thinking he should be looking his best, Keaton decides to light a cigarette. It's the classy thing to do, you know. Needing a match, Keaton finds a light that has plopped down next to him on the carriage. The "light" is actually the lit fuse of a bomb, thrown by an anarchist from a rooftop, intended to wreck havoc on the city's celebration. Keaton, oblivious to the danger, lights his smoke and casually throws away the bomb...right into a crowd of policemen. Thus sets off one of Keaton's most inventive short films, an epic chase that finds an innocent, if unobservant, man being pursued by hundreds of uniformed policemen. It's a situation worthy of Kafka but played for comedy. What wasn't funny were the serious circumstances under which Keaton made Cops. At the time, his friend and mentor, Fatty Arbuckle, was undergoing a third trial for manslaughter (the first two trials ended in hung juries). Arbuckle was eventually exonerated, with an official apology from the jury, but his career was effectively over because of the negative publicity he attracted from the court case. Thus, Keaton's probable inspiration for Cops wasn't exactly a laughing matter. The distributor for Cops was not particularly overjoyed either about the terrorist bomb sequence and how audiences would react to it. Just two years earlier, thirty people were killed and many more injured when an anarchist exploded a bomb on Wall Street. So public sensitivity was high regarding scenes of terrorist acts in movies but Cops didn't ignite any controversy over this subplot since Keaton kept the action moving too fast for audiences to really make any topical connections. From beginning to end, the short is consistently hilarious and inspired with several famous scenes, especially one where Keaton is fleeing his pursuers. In long shot, Keaton runs towards the camera through an alleyway. He stops in the middle of a road, just as the cops are making their way through the alleyway. Just then, a car zooms by the hapless fugitive, and in the wink of an eye, Keaton grabs hold of the back of the car and is lifted into the air and out of the frame, now safely hitchhiking on the back of the speeding vehicle. In this age of digital trickery and fantastic stunt work by trained professionals, this stunt is still amazing, not just because it looks impossible to do with such effortless grace, but because Keaton "throws away" the gag. He doesn't draw attention to it, so don't blink or you'll miss it. Incidentally, Keaton may have gotten the idea from Arbuckle, who performed a variation of the stunt on a moving train in the 1918 short Out West. Similar to the reality television show which shares its namesake, Keaton's Cops was filmed on the lively streets of Los Angeles, at the start of Keaton's most artistically rich decade. Keaton commands the southern California locale like it's his own backyard. For a wonderful tour of the many locations Keaton shot, check out the book Silent Echoes, by John Bengtson. Producer: Joseph M. Schenck Director: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton Screenplay: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton Cinematography: Elgin Lessley Film Editing: Buster Keaton Music: Gaylord Carter Cast: Buster Keaton (The Young Man), Joe Roberts (Police Chief), Virginia Fox (Mayor's Daughter), Edward F. Cline (Hobo), Steve Murphy (Conman). BW-22m. by Scott McGee

Buster Keaton: The Short Films Collection, 1920-1923 - A New Release from Kino


We're accustomed to seeing Buster Keaton's early short films piecemeal, as a special treat on a screening schedule or as an extra for a silent comedy feature. Kino's Buster Keaton The Short Films Collection collects all nineteen of the independent two-reelers Keaton made between 1920 and 1923. Assembled in one group, the films show the screen comedian refining his solo persona and developing a style more dependent on realism than cartoonish gags.

Coming directly from a productive apprenticeship with Fatty Arbuckle, Keaton was already adept with standard comedy material -- his pratfalls were the wildest on screen and no physical gag seemed too impossible for him. The Arbuckle-Keaton silent comedies are some of the funniest ever; we only wish that more of them existed in better-quality prints. Backer Joseph Schenck helped Buster move into Charles Chaplin's old Hollywood studio near the corner of Santa Monica Blvd. and Vine Street, where he began filming almost immediately.

Keaton's nineteen shorts include oft-screened favorites and others not nearly as well known. The High Sign was filmed first but held up for a year because Keaton thought it was too much like an Arbuckle production. An extortion gang hires Buster to assassinate a businessman, who immediately hires Buster as a bodyguard. A bravura chase threads through a house rigged with a number of trap doors and secret passageways, the kind of technical challenge that appealed to Keaton and his head engineer- gag-builder, Fred Gabourie.

Now recognized as his first solo masterpiece, Keaton's One Week takes silent comedy in a new direction. Its dry wit and physical logic immediately distinguish it from the frantic two-reelers by other comedians of 1920. Calendar pages count off the days as newlyweds cheerfully build a prefabricated house, not realizing that the assembly instructions have been sabotaged. The proud homeowners remain calm as the uninhabitable structure turns into a surreal nightmare. Keaton "tops" each crazy gag with one even more absurd, until the house meets its fate on some railroad tracks.

One Week is core Keaton in that none of its jokes are blatantly impossible. When things go "crazy" in his filmic universe, the physicality of what occurs remains stubbornly logical: Buster is never hammered into the ground or chopped into pieces. Keaton disliked cartoonish gags, such as a bit in The High Sign where he hangs his jacket on a hook that he's drawn on the wall with chalk. His is a more honest struggle with the modern world. When Laurel & Hardy are mangled by shop tools or crushed by runaway pianos, we sometimes want the torture to stop. Keaton's energetic hero understands little of the forces that are ruining his plans, but he never howls or complains.

The endless pursuit of Buster by an army of Cops therefore takes on an abstract quality. We laugh at individual stunts and marvel at the masses of uniforms that Buster seemingly cannot escape. Surrealists loved Keaton's innocent clashes with authority, and taken as a whole his films do make a whimsical artistic statement about the Human Condition. Many a Keaton hero ends up jailed or destitute, his boat sunk or his house destroyed, without ever really understanding what has happened.

Some of Keaton's humor is downright sadistic. Convict 13 has plenty of black comedy, with guards and inmates shot and clubbed by the score; Buster stages several gags on a grim execution scaffold. Other short subjects are organized around interesting design ideas. Symmetrical backyards separated by a fence keep young lovers apart in Neighbors, but Buster visits his girl by climbing across second-story clotheslines. Buster's gags often involve visual illusions. In one film the bars of an iron gate fool us into thinking that he's in prison. In another, a spare tire that Buster hops on to hitch a ride turns out to be a display sitting on the ground, and not attached to the automobile. Keaton sets up his story with silent inter-titles but normally avoids verbal jokes. A telling exception is a gag in which a man wanders into a party covered in bandages. Another guest asks, "What happened to you?" He answers: "I bought a Ford."

Keaton and his team loved elaborate mechanical gags. Functioning inventions adorn The Electric House, including a device that racks billiard balls. The Boat is practically a dry run for the director's later feature classic The Navigator. The voyage of the good ship Damfino is one disaster after another, even when Keaton's little dinghy remains tied up to the dock. The Playhouse is Keaton at his most surreal. Multiple exposures populate an entire musical theater -- actors, audience, musicians -- with duplicates of Buster Keaton. Several Keatons playing musical instruments interact perfectly; no mattes are visible. Technically, Keaton is forty years ahead of his time.

In 1923 Schenck and the backers insisted that Keaton abandon short subjects and move up to the more profitable arena of feature film production. As we've already seen, his first feature effort Three Ages was organized to be easily split into three separate short subjects, should he prove unpopular in the longer format.

Kino International's Blu-ray of Buster Keaton The Short Films Collection 1920-1923 is an archival-quality assembly. Only a couple of these 90 year-old gems are in perfect condition but all are presented at the best level of restoration so far attained. Once thought to be lost, the final short The Love Nest appears here in a reasonably good print. Day Dreams is missing several flashbacks, perhaps because they were printed on tinted film stock that deteriorated while the rest of the film remained intact. A couple of the shorts exist only in quality much poorer than the norm, and are included for the sake of completeness. The set comes on three separate Blu-ray discs, in order of filming. Each comedy has a newly recorded musical accompaniment.

As is their policy, Kino has not used digital enhancement, as that process invariably softens the image as it minimizes visual flaws. But as an extra feature, five of the shorts (The High Sign, The Balloonatic, The Boat and Cops) have been run through digital processing. Curious viewers can compare the results for themselves.

The ample extras provide a wealth of background information about this formative chapter in Keaton's career. Visual essays analyze fifteen titles, and are authored by experts including Bruce Lawton, David Kalat and Bret Wood. Keaton biographer Jeffrey Vance contributes an essay to the disc set's insert booklet. Locations expert John Bengtson details local sites where Keaton filmed. Vintage photos reveal most of Los Angeles in 1922 as empty acreage crisscrossed by dirt roads. A three-block strip of Cahuenga Blvd. saw a lot of Keaton production activity, as did a warren of downtown alleyways later wiped out by the Hollywood Freeway. Other menu choices lead viewers to alternate and deleted scenes, with a generous helping of related films by other silent comedians.

For more information about Buster Keaton The Short Films Collection 1920-1923, visit Kino Lorber. To order Buster Keaton The Short Films Collection 1920-1923, go to TCM Shopping.

by Glenn Erickson

Buster Keaton: The Short Films Collection, 1920-1923 - A New Release from Kino

We're accustomed to seeing Buster Keaton's early short films piecemeal, as a special treat on a screening schedule or as an extra for a silent comedy feature. Kino's Buster Keaton The Short Films Collection collects all nineteen of the independent two-reelers Keaton made between 1920 and 1923. Assembled in one group, the films show the screen comedian refining his solo persona and developing a style more dependent on realism than cartoonish gags. Coming directly from a productive apprenticeship with Fatty Arbuckle, Keaton was already adept with standard comedy material -- his pratfalls were the wildest on screen and no physical gag seemed too impossible for him. The Arbuckle-Keaton silent comedies are some of the funniest ever; we only wish that more of them existed in better-quality prints. Backer Joseph Schenck helped Buster move into Charles Chaplin's old Hollywood studio near the corner of Santa Monica Blvd. and Vine Street, where he began filming almost immediately. Keaton's nineteen shorts include oft-screened favorites and others not nearly as well known. The High Sign was filmed first but held up for a year because Keaton thought it was too much like an Arbuckle production. An extortion gang hires Buster to assassinate a businessman, who immediately hires Buster as a bodyguard. A bravura chase threads through a house rigged with a number of trap doors and secret passageways, the kind of technical challenge that appealed to Keaton and his head engineer- gag-builder, Fred Gabourie. Now recognized as his first solo masterpiece, Keaton's One Week takes silent comedy in a new direction. Its dry wit and physical logic immediately distinguish it from the frantic two-reelers by other comedians of 1920. Calendar pages count off the days as newlyweds cheerfully build a prefabricated house, not realizing that the assembly instructions have been sabotaged. The proud homeowners remain calm as the uninhabitable structure turns into a surreal nightmare. Keaton "tops" each crazy gag with one even more absurd, until the house meets its fate on some railroad tracks. One Week is core Keaton in that none of its jokes are blatantly impossible. When things go "crazy" in his filmic universe, the physicality of what occurs remains stubbornly logical: Buster is never hammered into the ground or chopped into pieces. Keaton disliked cartoonish gags, such as a bit in The High Sign where he hangs his jacket on a hook that he's drawn on the wall with chalk. His is a more honest struggle with the modern world. When Laurel & Hardy are mangled by shop tools or crushed by runaway pianos, we sometimes want the torture to stop. Keaton's energetic hero understands little of the forces that are ruining his plans, but he never howls or complains. The endless pursuit of Buster by an army of Cops therefore takes on an abstract quality. We laugh at individual stunts and marvel at the masses of uniforms that Buster seemingly cannot escape. Surrealists loved Keaton's innocent clashes with authority, and taken as a whole his films do make a whimsical artistic statement about the Human Condition. Many a Keaton hero ends up jailed or destitute, his boat sunk or his house destroyed, without ever really understanding what has happened. Some of Keaton's humor is downright sadistic. Convict 13 has plenty of black comedy, with guards and inmates shot and clubbed by the score; Buster stages several gags on a grim execution scaffold. Other short subjects are organized around interesting design ideas. Symmetrical backyards separated by a fence keep young lovers apart in Neighbors, but Buster visits his girl by climbing across second-story clotheslines. Buster's gags often involve visual illusions. In one film the bars of an iron gate fool us into thinking that he's in prison. In another, a spare tire that Buster hops on to hitch a ride turns out to be a display sitting on the ground, and not attached to the automobile. Keaton sets up his story with silent inter-titles but normally avoids verbal jokes. A telling exception is a gag in which a man wanders into a party covered in bandages. Another guest asks, "What happened to you?" He answers: "I bought a Ford." Keaton and his team loved elaborate mechanical gags. Functioning inventions adorn The Electric House, including a device that racks billiard balls. The Boat is practically a dry run for the director's later feature classic The Navigator. The voyage of the good ship Damfino is one disaster after another, even when Keaton's little dinghy remains tied up to the dock. The Playhouse is Keaton at his most surreal. Multiple exposures populate an entire musical theater -- actors, audience, musicians -- with duplicates of Buster Keaton. Several Keatons playing musical instruments interact perfectly; no mattes are visible. Technically, Keaton is forty years ahead of his time. In 1923 Schenck and the backers insisted that Keaton abandon short subjects and move up to the more profitable arena of feature film production. As we've already seen, his first feature effort Three Ages was organized to be easily split into three separate short subjects, should he prove unpopular in the longer format. Kino International's Blu-ray of Buster Keaton The Short Films Collection 1920-1923 is an archival-quality assembly. Only a couple of these 90 year-old gems are in perfect condition but all are presented at the best level of restoration so far attained. Once thought to be lost, the final short The Love Nest appears here in a reasonably good print. Day Dreams is missing several flashbacks, perhaps because they were printed on tinted film stock that deteriorated while the rest of the film remained intact. A couple of the shorts exist only in quality much poorer than the norm, and are included for the sake of completeness. The set comes on three separate Blu-ray discs, in order of filming. Each comedy has a newly recorded musical accompaniment. As is their policy, Kino has not used digital enhancement, as that process invariably softens the image as it minimizes visual flaws. But as an extra feature, five of the shorts (The High Sign, The Balloonatic, The Boat and Cops) have been run through digital processing. Curious viewers can compare the results for themselves. The ample extras provide a wealth of background information about this formative chapter in Keaton's career. Visual essays analyze fifteen titles, and are authored by experts including Bruce Lawton, David Kalat and Bret Wood. Keaton biographer Jeffrey Vance contributes an essay to the disc set's insert booklet. Locations expert John Bengtson details local sites where Keaton filmed. Vintage photos reveal most of Los Angeles in 1922 as empty acreage crisscrossed by dirt roads. A three-block strip of Cahuenga Blvd. saw a lot of Keaton production activity, as did a warren of downtown alleyways later wiped out by the Hollywood Freeway. Other menu choices lead viewers to alternate and deleted scenes, with a generous helping of related films by other silent comedians. For more information about Buster Keaton The Short Films Collection 1920-1923, visit Kino Lorber. To order Buster Keaton The Short Films Collection 1920-1923, go to TCM Shopping. by Glenn Erickson

Buster Keaton Shorts


TCM's program of three Buster Keaton shorts includes Cops (1922), which the stone-faced comic dismissed as a routine effort but many fans came to consider one of the all-time great two-reelers. Keaton plays the wistful suitor of a pretty girl (Virginia Fox) who refuses to see him until he proves himself a success in business. The short climaxes with a brilliantly staged chase involving a parade, an anarchist's bomb, Keaton careening about in a horse-drawn wagon that contains a load of stolen furniture, and an army of pursuing policemen. Some of silent comedy's most inventive sight gags are employed here, with the athletic Keaton showing his mastery of physical comedy. The film also is distinguished by an ending that is bittersweet yet avoids sentimentality.

The Blacksmith (1922) casts Keaton as the hapless assistant of a burly, blustery man (Joe Roberts) who works on automobiles as well as shoeing horses. Some classic gags are built around Keaton's efforts to help his girlfriend (Virginia Fox again) choose the right shoe for her horse, and the destruction of a luxurious Rolls Royce.

The Balloonatic (1923) has a very free-floating plot as Keaton rides a hot-air balloon to a landing in a woods where he finds a girl (Phyllis Haver) who proves more adept than he at survival skills in the Great Outdoors.

All three shorts were produced by Joseph Schenck and co-written and directed by Keaton. Later in 1923 Keaton would switch from shorts to feature-length films.

Cops:
Producer: Joseph M. Schenck
Director: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton
Screenplay: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton
Cinematography: Elgin Lessley
Film Editing: Buster Keaton
Music: Gaylord Carter
Cast: Buster Keaton (The Young Man), Joe Roberts (Police Chief), Virginia Fox (Mayor¿s Daughter), Eddie Cline (Hobo), Steve Murphy (Conman).
BW-22m.

The Blacksmith:
Producer: Raymond Rohauer, Joseph M. Schenck
Director: Buster Keaton, Malcolm St. Clair
Screenplay: Buster Keaton, Malcolm St. Clair
Cinematography: Elgin Lessley
Music: Lee Erwin
Cast: Buster Keaton (Blacksmith¿s Assistant), Joe Roberts (Blacksmith), Virginia Fox (Horsewoman).
BW-22m.

The Balloonatic:
Producer: Joseph M. Schenck
Director: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton
Screenplay: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton
Cinematography: Elgin Lessley
Cast: Buster Keaton, Phyllis Haver, Babe London
BW-27m.

by Roger Fristoe

* For more information about Buster Keaton, go to http://www.busterkeaton.com/Damfinos.htm

Buster Keaton Shorts

TCM's program of three Buster Keaton shorts includes Cops (1922), which the stone-faced comic dismissed as a routine effort but many fans came to consider one of the all-time great two-reelers. Keaton plays the wistful suitor of a pretty girl (Virginia Fox) who refuses to see him until he proves himself a success in business. The short climaxes with a brilliantly staged chase involving a parade, an anarchist's bomb, Keaton careening about in a horse-drawn wagon that contains a load of stolen furniture, and an army of pursuing policemen. Some of silent comedy's most inventive sight gags are employed here, with the athletic Keaton showing his mastery of physical comedy. The film also is distinguished by an ending that is bittersweet yet avoids sentimentality. The Blacksmith (1922) casts Keaton as the hapless assistant of a burly, blustery man (Joe Roberts) who works on automobiles as well as shoeing horses. Some classic gags are built around Keaton's efforts to help his girlfriend (Virginia Fox again) choose the right shoe for her horse, and the destruction of a luxurious Rolls Royce. The Balloonatic (1923) has a very free-floating plot as Keaton rides a hot-air balloon to a landing in a woods where he finds a girl (Phyllis Haver) who proves more adept than he at survival skills in the Great Outdoors. All three shorts were produced by Joseph Schenck and co-written and directed by Keaton. Later in 1923 Keaton would switch from shorts to feature-length films. Cops: Producer: Joseph M. Schenck Director: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton Screenplay: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton Cinematography: Elgin Lessley Film Editing: Buster Keaton Music: Gaylord Carter Cast: Buster Keaton (The Young Man), Joe Roberts (Police Chief), Virginia Fox (Mayor¿s Daughter), Eddie Cline (Hobo), Steve Murphy (Conman). BW-22m. The Blacksmith: Producer: Raymond Rohauer, Joseph M. Schenck Director: Buster Keaton, Malcolm St. Clair Screenplay: Buster Keaton, Malcolm St. Clair Cinematography: Elgin Lessley Music: Lee Erwin Cast: Buster Keaton (Blacksmith¿s Assistant), Joe Roberts (Blacksmith), Virginia Fox (Horsewoman). BW-22m. The Balloonatic: Producer: Joseph M. Schenck Director: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton Screenplay: Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton Cinematography: Elgin Lessley Cast: Buster Keaton, Phyllis Haver, Babe London BW-27m. by Roger Fristoe * For more information about Buster Keaton, go to http://www.busterkeaton.com/Damfinos.htm

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