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5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Buster's Swan Song - In Italian Yet!, 13 November 2007
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Author:
theowinthrop from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Movie titans rarely know when to leave the scene properly. Hitchcock's
last film (possibly) should have been PSYCHO or NORTH BY NORTHWEST,
rather than FAMILY PLOT. CHAPLIN should have avoided A KING IN NEW YORK
and THE COUNTESS FROM HONG KONG (and possibly cut LIMELIGHT to a
handful of scenes from the English Music Hall, including the one with
his peer Buster Keaton). Welles was able to pull out one great last
film, F IS FOR FAKE, but he was still appearing in terrible movies up
until his death in 1985. Did John Ford really need to leave with SEVEN
WOMEN rather than say TWO RODE TOGETHER or CHEYENNE AUTUMN? Did Preston
Sturgis make his film record better by doing THE FRENCH, THEY ARE A
FUNNY RACE!
Buster Keaton is a trifle luckier than these, his peers. His nadir as a
film artist was at MGM in the early 1930s, and he slowly struggled
back. It was his luck that he did find work as a joke writer, and then
a supporting comic actor, and occasionally (in foreign films) as a
director. Then came his rediscovery in the 1950s, due to James Mason
finding many of Keaton's old movies in the mansion Mason was residing
at - and handing them to a film archive to be preserved - and to
television, which allowed Keaton to still do some of his old physical
comedy. It's hard to realize that his appearances on THE TWILIGHT ZONE
or on Allan Funt's CANDID CAMERA kept him in the public eye. The sale
of his life story for the abominable film THE BUSTER KEATON STORY gave
him financial support to the end of his life. If he appeared in too
many drecky films like the Annette Funicello "Beach" films, he still
did appearances (even if brief) in A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO
THE FORUM, IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD, LIMELIGHT, and (in a final
spurt of his talent) THE RAILRODDER.
Keaton's last starring part was in this Italian comedy that co-starred
the Italian comic team of Franco Franchi and Ciccio Ingrasso. Not well
known outside Italy, they were a very popular comic turn in many films.
This is the only one, however, that I had the chance to see them in.
Actually they were good, and fairly complemented the elderly Keaton.
Buster's physical humor was somewhat curtailed by 1966, but he was able
to get mileage from the sort of complex jokes that he used in his
silent films of forty years before. For example, he is using a bathroom
at one point that Franco and Ciccio were just repairing (they were
forced to). As he tries the sink's hot and cold water taps the water
flushes in the toilet. As he tries the toilet's flushometer the shower
stall starts pouring water out. As he turns on the water taps in the
stall the sink fills up! Does this discourage him? No - he studies the
situation and simply figures out how to fill up the sink by turning on
the shower stall, etc.
As for Franco and Ciccio they bear their half of the film as well. The
plot deals with how Buster (General Von Kassler) is in German hands but
the Allies (directed by Fred Clark as General Zacharian) are trying to
get their hands on him. Franco and Ciccio are two Italian - American
soldiers who are ordered to get the General from the Germans. They make
an interesting pair. Franco is rather dubious (it is 1943 - 44) about
the Fascist - Italian point of view. Unfortunately he is tied to Ciccio
who is pretending to be one Italian that Il Duce would be proud of - a
follower of the official lie...err line. No matter how absurd their
current situation is in the film, Ciccio openly insists that the Nazis
are the key to victory. He keeps lauding them as engineering and
mechanical geniuses, even when their new amphibious jeep - boat sinks
constantly underneath himself and the more realistic Franco.
Eventually the General realizes the war is lost. Unfortunately the
General's discovery leads his "protectors" into deciding they might as
well get rid of him. So the General has to be saved by Franco and
Ciccio (a series of events that allow Franco to do his imitation of
Hitler at one point).
The film is actually an amusing film for Buster to end with - not like
THE RAILRODDER perhaps, but one that is worth watching. The conclusion
of the film is bittersweet too, given how the coming of sound helped
wreck Keaton's star status at MGM. Wisely his part is silent - unlike
Wallace Beery in GRAND HOTEL Buster did not essay a "German" accent -
and he proves by the mileage of his filmed performance that he did not
need dialog. But at the end, when Franco and Ciccio give Buster his
freedom they present him with civilian clothes: his old pork-pie hat
and an ill-fitting jacket. He quietly removes his uniform and puts
these on, turns to them, and (in his well known American flat baritone)
says "Thanks!". Then he walks into the sunset, and the film ends. Not a
great film by any stretch, but a sweet end for a film legend.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Live to win, 11 April 2009
Author:
sheenafilm from Hamburg, Germany
1943: Two American soldiers (Franco and Ciccio) are captured on a mission to find the German general von Kassler (Buster Keaton!) who lets them escape with secret documents - fakes that are intended to fall into the enemies' hands and cause confusion. But by mistake, the two captives get away with the real plans and then get in the middle of the attack, trying to survive in various disguises. Franco has a great scene when he holds a nonsensical speech to the soldiers ("we can only win the war if we don't lose it"). But this comedy by the busy and popular Sicilian duo Franco and Ciccio stands out from the rest by its guest star. Subtle touches like Keaton playing chess or piano make a difference. The stoicism of the silent Keaton provides a great contrast for the aggression and loudness of Franco Ressel as the colonel. A recommendable little comedy.
A Solid Finale for Buster, 19 December 2010
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Author:
frankebe from California, USA
This is a very likable movie, very much UNlike the American sibling
"Sergeant Deadhead", which is awful. Although I agree with the opinions
of theowinthrop's review, here and there he makes a statement that
sounds as if he was watching a different movie. I did not see Keaton
figure out how to "fill up the sink by turning on the shower stall"--to
the contrary, Keaton never figures out a thing in this scene and simply
runs off; I also saw no amphibious jeep-boat in the movie
I suppose
theowinthrop saw this film a billion years ago and simply mis-remembers
it; and this is too bad because these ideas are really quite good and I
regret they are not in the film.
Despite such disappointments, and despite the nagging rumination about
what a different movie it would have been if the producer had let
Keaton co-write the script, this film has a lot going for it. It moves
along fairly briskly (although it could still use a little editing),
there are enough visual jokes and action sequences that it doesn't
matter if you see it without English subtitles (although it will help
if you can find a story breakdown before watching), and having Buster
Keaton in it sure doesn't hurt! Although Franco and Ciccio are not
really funny, they are fun to watch, and do keep things moving along. I
give much credit to the director that Franco & Ciccio, and Keaton are
in the film almost continuously, and Keaton seems to have gotten his
way with a few gags and the entire washing-his-face routine. And as
mentioned by the other reviewer, this movie does have the warmest
send-off ever given to an aging comedy icon. The little epilogue is
quite funny, too.
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