#Battling Butler
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Buster Keaton and Sally O'Neil Battling Butler (1926)
#buster keaton#1930s#1910s#1920s#1920s hollywood#silent film#silent comedy#silent cinema#silent era#silent movies#pre code#pre code hollywood#pre code film#pre code era#pre code movies#damfino#damfinos#vintage hollywood#black and white#buster edit#slapstick#old hollywood#sally oneil#battling butler#1926
63 notes
·
View notes
Text
doodle from a scene in “Battling Butler” 🩶🫠
#buster keaton#sketching#doodle#drawing#digital artist#digital drawing#battling butler#silent film#silent era#the great stone face#damfino#art#doodles#drawing is fun#artists on tumblr#fan art#silent movies#joseph frank keaton
54 notes
·
View notes
Text
I mean…. I couldn’t NOT make this
20 notes
·
View notes
Text
#MovieMonday Buster Keaton never trained harder than he did for “Battling Butler,” 1926. A case of mistaken identity that ends up in the boxing ring & resolved outside of it - the movie was a knock-out hit ;)
#movie monday#buster keaton#francis mcdonald#sally o'neil#snitz edwards#tom wilson#1920s#vintage hollywood#battling butler#boxing#silent era#silent movies#ibks#the international buster keaton society#buster keaton society#the damfinos#damfino#damfamily
52 notes
·
View notes
Text
Alfred 💗 Martin
Battling Butler (1926)
Music: Cavalleria Rusticana Intermezzo by Pietro Mascagni
#buster keaton#pietro mascagni#battling butler#snitz edwards#Frances McDonald#comedy#silent movies#1920s#silent film#silent comedy#1920s cinema#golden age of hollywood#hollywood#boxing#my edit#raging bull
55 notes
·
View notes
Text
70 notes
·
View notes
Text
@bussykeaton
14 notes
·
View notes
Text
CC's New Watch Ranking - June 2023
Every month on Letterboxd, I make a list of the 10 best films I’ve seen for the first time. It’s a fun way to compare movies separated in time, genre, and country of origin, and helps me keep track of what I’m watching! This is a breakdown of those films.
June! An exhausting month. We wrapped on the movie after a number of 12+ hour days. That, on top of two new jobs that picked up this month, turned June into a stressed mess for me. I spent a lot of time in bed and in the garden, trying to quiet an overstrained brain. For the first time in three years, I have seen only the 10 films on this list this month! That’s why Zaslav felt safe firing all the TCM folks, he knew I was away. But this gives me a chance to discuss some movies I wasn’t crazy about and explore why. There’s something to be learned from every film, even those that don’t please. (I am going to yadda-yadda through some entries, though.)
Click below to read the breakdown! Click HERE to view the list on Letterboxd!
10. Night Moves
1975- Arthur Penn
Was kind of disappointed that this didn’t move for me as it does for others! It reminded me too much of this schlocky film I watched earlier this year Stick. Stick had Burt Reynolds going to Miami to be a double-agent chauffeur for the mob. Or something. Night Moves had the exact same thing happen? Or something? Maybe that’s on me for not paying better attention.
I promised myself I would explore why this didn’t capture me. The best I got is that it’s a slow moving mystery centered on a rather boring figure. Next!
9. Bringing Up Baby
1938 - Howard Hawks
See, I heard about this movie a long time ago. Never in my life did I think the ‘Baby’ in the title was a leopard! This is a fun slapstick comedy about a man who fumbles his hot paleontologist wife for a pathologically lying Katherine Hepburn. I get it, who wouldn’t do the same in that situation, but I was surprised there wasn’t more back and forth between Hepburn and Grant’s fiance. Not quite as charming as another slapstick comedy on this list, but still immensely satisfying.
Cary Grant in a fluffy nightie? 👀 Reeks of gender.
8. Bend of the River
1952 - Anthony Mann
The river! It bends! I find myself watching a lot of pre-1955 movies while I’m doing other tasks. Cowboy flicks and noirs make great background noise. Their rhythms and plots can be so predictable that you can fall right back in if you lose attention for a few minutes. This one gripped me, though. My cinematic nemesis James Stewart plays a black hatted cowboy trying to reinvent himself, escorting a group of settlers to their new home in Oregon. The supplies they ordered don’t arrive in time, so before winter sets in he rides to find what happened to them, visiting the den of villainy and sin known as… Portland. It’s very funny to see the city depicted as a town full of drunken gold miners and thieves, when in a century it will be home to queer witches and their burlesques. (Hi Caity <3) Fun plot, a few interesting reversals, and more colonial assumptions than I can typically stand. It’s no McCabe and Mrs. Miller, but if you’re in the mood for a PNW Western, look no further.
7. Step Brothers
2008 - Adam McKay
A movie so culturally dominant that I knew a huge amount of lines without ever having to see it. It was fun! Will Ferrell and John C. Riley have perfect comedic chemistry, and embody this strange energy of 15 year olds trapped in 40 year old bodies perfectly. The entire film works off of their performance. Just like last month’s Face/Off, two actors giving singular, unique performances is all you need to make a memorable picture.
6. Battling Butler
1926 - Buster Keaton
It’s Buster Keaton! It was fine. I don’t have any more interesting thoughts on him in this movie than I would have in the next one.
5. The Cameraman
1928 - Buster Keaton, Edward Sedgwick
Extremely fun. Buster doing a bit of metacommentary on how artists are valued, and the systems they have to engage with in order to find work. Extra satisfying to view amidst the writer’s strike. These studio heads would have nothing without the footage that the people on the ground capture. The Tong War battle at the end is particularly engaging. It’s the sort of Looney Tunes/Roger Rabbit comic energy that I adore, able to float through a conflict without any worry or care. Satisfying, destiny-bound ending.
4. Once Upon a Time in America
1984 - Sergio Leone
Now we get to the good stuff. Sergio Leone is synonymous with the Wild West - why is it so surprising that he would take on another classic tale of Americana? A gangster drama, an immigrant story, a distinctly East Coast experience of the twentieth century and the superpower that defined it. Where his cowboy movies focus on the mythic qualities of its protagonists - framed among giant landscapes, attention drawn to their weapons and horses - the protagonists of this film are framed within a series of relationships. It is their association with the people around them, the space between their bodies, that Leone captures so well. It is a promise of genius from a filmmaker whose career ended too early. This is a freewheeling biopic of a Lower East Side urchin who rises up towards the top, intersecting with high levels of power and upheavals in his closest bonds. Framed by an opium dream, not afraid to break free from logic, this is a masterful exploration of a cinematic space from one of our best directors.
3. Asteroid City
2023 - Wes Anderson
I feel so lucky to be alive at a time when I can see Wes Anderson movies in theaters. The sheer thrill of this opening sequence…. A black and white TV format exploding into a wide frame, desert-chic phantasmagoria, a MINIATURE TRAIN MODEL title sequence… god. Irreplaceable cinematic moments. It needs a gigantic screen to be really understood.
I think a lot of the theatre-going experience, of the crowd itself, as I remember this film. It was a great sample audience. A group of teen boys who must have just started their summer break. Several pairs of old women enjoying long-scheduled friend dates. A nuclear family. Me, alone, having made use of the Value Tuesday discounts. ($1 off hot dogs!) The whole crowd laughed throughout the thing - has Anderson ever been this funny? It made me feel a lot of hope, that an audience would take such pleasure in little background beats and quiet humor. Much of movie rhetoric paints The Audience writ-large as a bunch of mindless Marvel fans who need jokes telegraphed from a mile away. How hard the subtle humor hit really made me happy.
The story itself is something I’m going to have to meditate on. Anderson is working some meta-commentary that can be hard to grasp with only one viewing. I get the sense he’s looking at his own work and his style of directing. He’s famous for his ensembles - it’s a movie about a cast making a play. He’s famous for his invented worlds - we walk backstage and meet a writer-director who literally lives in a set after the performances are done. He’s a director beset by nostalgia for times he never lived - Jeffrey Wright says to a bunch of young geniuses, “Should have picked a better time to be born.” This is why I feel such a thrill, such satisfaction, in being alive while his movies are airing. I get to witness the years, hopefully decades, of discussion that this movie inspires. I think this is already ripe for a “Underappreciated in its time despite being his masterpiece” sort of thing.
2. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
2023 - Joaquim Dos Santos, Justin K. Thompson, Kemp Powers
God, what a lovely film to watch. My gushing excitement for this is cut by the recent revelations about its production. I spit on the names of Lord and the names of Miller, I wish them to suffer as they have made others suffer. I think of how beautiful this film is - how every frame is a gorgeous vortex, how you could hit pause at any moment and drink in one billion details that all add up to an incredible whole. I think of the well-crafted story, the nail-biting cliff hanger, the desire I had walking out of the theatre for simply MORE. And I think of how much better this could be if the artists making it were paid more fairly and given more breaks. Look at how beautiful this movie is - IT COULD HAVE BEEN SO MUCH MORE BEAUTIFUL IF THE WORKPLACE WAS LESS TOXIC. I reject any narrative about this film that says that, somehow, all the blood sweat and tears made it what it is. No. Absolutely not. This move is what it is because of hundreds of people toiling *despite* the invented hardships. It is so symptomatic of what is wrong in Hollywood, why so many people are striking now. They are being hampered from making their work excel because of these greedy people at the top who project their insecurity and petty rage all the way down.
Anyway. I love Miles. I love Gwen. I love all my Spiderfriends. Hope to see them again some day under less toxic circumstances.
1. What’s Up, Doc?
1972 - Peter Bogdanovich
I’ve been studying the screwball comedy this year. It’s an oft-used term without a great definition. It’s got romance and laugh, it has some odd personalities… but what else? Does it need an aggressive woman? A reluctant man? Do they need to be thrust together by fate? Do you *have* to have an outstanding ensemble, or does that just happen by coincidence? As I try to pick apart these elements I watch this on a whim one day and see that Peter Bogdanovich has already done all that research and found his answer. Screwball comedy? It looks like this. It’s What’s Up, Doc?
From the old-Hollywood opening credits that’s a hand turning a book, to the delightful absurdity that is its central premise - what if a spy, a jewel thief, and some dude all had the same luggage? - everything about this is finely tuned to make you laugh. Barbara Streisand is more or less literally playing Bugs Bunny. How amazing is that? There are so many things that will make you well up laughter that I hesitate to try and explain them more. Just watch this incredibly funny, charming movie. I have a private litmus test for how good a movie is. Often I’ll watch stuff with my wife sitting next to me as she plays video games. If a movie drags her attention away from the game and keeps her locked in the whole time, that is a great film. It was that way with this. Highly recommended.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thank you for reading! If you liked any of these thoughts feel free to follow me on Letterboxd, where I post reviews and keep meticulous track of every movie I watch. Look forward to more posts like these next month!
#movies#film#cc oc#letterboxd#movie ranking#What's Up Doc?#across the spider verse#Asteroid City#Once Upon A Time In America#The Cameraman#Battling Butler#Step Brothers#Bend of the River#Bringing Up Baby#Night Moves
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
Buster Keaton in Battling Butler (1926)
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
I always thought it charming how he just goes for it. He's a goofball, but he's a debonair goofball.
Especially for the hot as a volcano competition @hotvintagepoll
#kisses#buster keaton#ruth dwyer#seven chances#kathryn mcguire#sherlock jr#sybil seely#one week#virginia fox#neighbors#alice mann#coney island#sally o'neil#battling butler#comique#silent era#silent movies#vintage hollywood#hot stuff baby#1910s#1920s#old hollywood#reblog
803 notes
·
View notes
Text
Buster Keaton, Sally O'Neil, and Snitz Edwards Battling Butler (1926)
#buster keaton#1930s#1910s#1920s#1920s hollywood#silent film#silent comedy#silent cinema#silent era#silent movies#pre code#pre code hollywood#pre code film#pre code era#pre code movies#damfino#damfinos#vintage hollywood#black and white#buster edit#slapstick#old hollywood#sally oneil#snitz edwards#battling butler#1926
31 notes
·
View notes
Text
youtube
Buster Keaton Tribute
#Buster Keaton#Tribute#Silent Film#The Great Stone Face#The General#Our Hospitality#Three Ages#Sherlock Jr#The Navigator#Seven Chances#Steamboat Bill Jr#Go West#Battling Butler#College#Youtube
0 notes
Video
youtube
Raging Bull (9/12) Movie CLIP - You Never Got Me Down (1980) HD
https://thegruelingtruth.com/boxing/raging-bull-buster-keaton/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qdjUk6aZMU
1 note
·
View note
Text
#ThrowbackThursday A programme from the opening of Loew’s Theatre, Baltimore which took place on Buster Keaton’s 31st birthday & included a showing of “Battling Butler.”
#throwback thursday#buster keaton#battling butler#1920s#silent era#silent movies#vintage hollywood#ibks#the international buster keaton society#buster keaton society#the damfinos#damfino#damfamily
16 notes
·
View notes
Text
BUTTster Keaton
#buster keaton#silent movies#1920s#the general#the cameraman#battling butler#college#comedy#silent film#silent comedy#1920s cinema#hollywood#hard luck#marceline day#golden age of hollywood
198 notes
·
View notes
Text
Film Journal
"Battling Butler" by Buster Keaton
0 notes