Though this is perhaps the funniest title card during this 10 minute, 19.92-second Harold Lloyd silent, black & white comedy short, Lloyd historians Richard Correll and John Bengtson agree on their commentary track for this piece of film history that that line probably contains a typo. The Harold Lloyd character has just fallen on a bar of soap dropped by a maid for the residence he's walking past, and he threatens to "sue." That's when the maid says, through the title card, "Clam yourself, mister--my name ain't sue" (evidently, she is not only clumsy, but also hearing-impaired). Just before this tragic incident, the foppish Lloyd character has flipped his last quarter to decide on whether using it to pay for a much-needed haircut, or to purchase a desperately-required lunch--and the quarter has rolled into a sidewalk storm water grate! All in all, it is not this man's day, as bad transforms to worse, and he finally winds up being shot at by prison guards!
Review of Take a Chance
Take a Chance
(1918)
"Clam yourself, mister--my name ain't Sue!"
11 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers