When timid Charles King and wife Lucille Hutton read in the newspaper that there has been a 300% increase in burglaries, they install a burglar alarm. However, that is no bar to burglar Al St. John, who does not hear it -- he's deaf.
This silent two-reeler, which has just been posted to the National Film Preservation website is a mediocre effort. Mr. King looks like Charley Chase playing a timid character. While Al is fairly good as he stoically goes about breaking and entering, his combination of clumsiness, deftness and pulling out an enormous ear trumpet soon palls. There are too few gags to fill up the eighteen minutes that this film takes. It looks like the uncredited director and writers -- directing is attributed to either St. John or Grover Jones -- came up with a good idea and then did little with it.
This silent two-reeler, which has just been posted to the National Film Preservation website is a mediocre effort. Mr. King looks like Charley Chase playing a timid character. While Al is fairly good as he stoically goes about breaking and entering, his combination of clumsiness, deftness and pulling out an enormous ear trumpet soon palls. There are too few gags to fill up the eighteen minutes that this film takes. It looks like the uncredited director and writers -- directing is attributed to either St. John or Grover Jones -- came up with a good idea and then did little with it.