The Boy Friend (1928) Poster

(I) (1928)

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8/10
Bright, Hopeful and (incidentally) Very Very FUNNY!
redryan6417 October 2014
ALTHOUGH HIS NAME may well be no household word today, this 2 reel comedy is one in the series starring one Max Davidson. The German born actor-comedian of Jewish descent was a very prolific and popular screen funny-man; whose movie career began before World War I. His Roach comedies were steeped in ethnic humour, often paring "the Cohens & the Kellys".

THE CAST IS well constituted, having been cast from the players who were regulars at the Hal Roach Studios. Max Davidson, Marion Byron, Edgar Kennedy and Fay Holderness all pitched in and did their usual good job. We were at first miffed by the male romantic lead; who seemed very athletic, handsome and adept at doing comedy. It turned out to be Gordon Elliot; who we knew better as "Wild Bill" Elliot, star of so many "B" Westerns during the 1930's & '40's.

AS FOR THE production, it is beautifully filmed; utilizing an excellent mixture of inside locales and beautiful outdoor scenes on the streets of Culver City, California, where the Hal Roach Studios were located. The picture wastes no time in moving the story along without even one superfluous frame being shot.

ONE ADDITIONAL STRONG suit that THE BOY FRIEND possesses is the inclusion of the work of writer, H.M. Walker. He was the very skilled scribe who contributed so many great scripts during both the silent as well as during the Talkie era.

IT WAS THE work of Mr. Walker that made him the foremost writer of title cards and dialog during the era of silents. He continued the practice with the coming of sound with those opening scene title cards that set the scene and mood for the laughs to come in those LAUREL & HARDY Sound Shorts.
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The 12th Annual San Francisco Silent Film Festival, David Jeffers for SIFFblog.com
rdjeffers16 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Saturday, July 14, 10:30 a. m., The Castro, San Francisco

Max Davidson reluctantly takes his pretty young daughter (played by Marion Byron) shopping, where she flirts with handsome Gorden Elliott, "…who had played football in college, and studied law in his spare time." They wait for the shoe salesman, and Byron laughs at the holes in his socks, running off when he reciprocates. Leaving her package on the floor, Elliott opens it to discover a pair of lace bloomers, which he waves as he chases her down the street! Somehow, she invites the young man to her home for dinner, and her parents decide he might run off if he thinks they are crazy. They do a sensational job convincing him, not surprisingly, until Max finds out Elliott is his Boss's son! Add to this a perpetually eating beat cop played by Edgar Kennedy, a footrace down the sidewalk to catch the boy, and a car wreck finale with mom and dad in the rumble seat wearing togas! Byron and Davidson also paired in the sensationally funny Roach short, Pass the Gravy (1928).
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