Just a Good Guy (1924) Poster

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6/10
Roach Tries a Touch of Sennett
boblipton13 October 2014
With Hampton del Ruth in charge of this Arthur Stone comedy, it's little surprise that it seems more like a Sennett comedy than a Roach comedy. In fact, the "mechanical man" plot was used several times by Sennett; 1917's "A Clever Dummy" with Ben Turpin springs to mind. The second half has him running a pawn shop and I don't have to tell you what that sounds like.

Stone seems more like a precursor of Harry Langdon, with his childlike attitude, than a more typical Roach character, grounded at least partially in the real world. Perhaps this was a style of comedy that Del Ruth hoped to foster, because most of the people that Stone encounters and annoys -- which are the same thing -- quickly grow impatient with him.

There are a couple of faces that will make this interesting for the folks who like to spot the stars before anyone knew who they were. Olive Borden shows up to run a scam, and Fay Wray can be spotted in a taxi. However this short, while never less than watchable, is not as good as one would wish. Particularly Hal Roach.
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6/10
The main question here seems to be, "Can Kewpie Morgan . . . "
oscaralbert26 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
" . . . REALLY be described as 'JUST A GOOD GUY'?" Surely, most viewers will give a negative answer to this query. After trashing the shop of a pawnbroker foolish enough to give him a job (an apparent hate crime, by the civilized standards of the 21st Century), shirking his overdue rent and helping others to do likewise and defrauding one party after another, Master Morgan seems more like Public Enemy Number One.
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