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7/10
Pretty good although limited to what was in the public domain at the time
AlsExGal30 June 2016
This tribute to Hollywood comedians hosted by Joseph Cotton was mostly unsurprising but not badly done considering the date. I would not rate it as highly as the contemporary compilation films of Robert Youngson (The Golden Age Of Comedy, When Comedy Was King). It showed public domain silent footage of Chaplin, Keaton, Langdon, and various other silent clowns, paying special attention to Mack Sennett.

If Hal Roach was mentioned I missed it, and I don't think there was even a still photo of Laurel & Hardy. I guess producer David Wolper was taking no chances with usage rights. The Harold Lloyd footage was of the building climb - but from Feet First instead of Safety Last. Cotton also mentioned Lloyd's two compilation films. This may have have been Lloyd's price for permitting use of the footage.

There were a few clips from public domain talkies, such as the Sennett Fields shorts, as well as newsreel footage of sound stars such as Bob Hope and Martin & Lewis. Obviously there were rights problems for the sound era.

There were a couple of intriguing things: This may have been the first time the City Lights rehearsal-on-camera footage was ever seen publicly (you can see some in the much later Unknown Chaplin series), and if I'm not mistaken the man in a short clip from an early Fred Allen short was none other than an unrecognizable Clifton Webb sans mustache. Straight man, indeed.

There was one great moment when Joseph Cotton appears on camera to deliver an erudite, scholarly dissertation on Freud's analysis of humor - and receives a pie in the face.
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2/10
Another sloppy, ill-researched effort.
westernone11 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
It would seem these documentaries were made as fast as possible, or they had no interest in doing any fact finding when they assembled them. Here, Mack Sennett is the centre of the comedy universe, so important that stars that never had anything to do with him are rattled off in a roll call of all his discoveries. Bits of film showing stars supposedly in Sennett productions include Arbuckle, Sterling and Turpin from 1930's Vitaphone films. The superfast and confused montage of action clips are likely from the series of 1940's Warner Brothers compilations. The strangest part of this story is the total omission of the man who created some of the most beloved films of all time, in 1963 still very much alive, Hal Roach. All of his stars, Snub Pollard, Charlie Chase, and most glaring of all, Laurel and Hardy, go unmentioned. This can't be by chance, they're telling 25% of the story. What was on their minds?
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