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Billy Blazes, Esq.

Billy Blazes, Esq. (1919)

July. 06,1919
|
6
|
NR
| Comedy Western

Billy Blazes confronts Crooked Charley, who has been ruling the town of Peaceful Vale through fear and violence.

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boblipton
1919/07/06

When Harold Lloyd switched from his Lonesome Luke character to his "Glasses" character in 1917, it was so he could appear in a wider variety of stories. Luke's ill-fitting assortment of clothes -- visually an anti-Charie-Chaplin type-cast in lower-class and bum characters. By adopting his more normal -looking garb, he could offer more situations.For a while, he did not. He continued offering the same old gags-in-a-setting film; gags at the beach in BY THE SAD SEA WAVES; gags in a park in TAKE A CHANCE. However, by 1919, he was actually doing stories, and with this one, we see a fine integration of high-speed gag construction and story. Oh, true enough, it's a pure burlesque of western stories, with Harold as the gunslinger, Bebe Daniels as the pretty barmaid who is menaced and Snub Pollard as the sheriff. However, he was ready, and in a few months, he would switch from two-reelers to three-reelers and full stories and take the take the industry by storm.

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MARIO GAUCI
1919/07/07

Harold Lloyd parodies the William S. Hart stoic Western hero prototype, resulting in an interesting one-reeler rather than an uproarious one; the later and somewhat similar AN EASTERN WESTERNER (1920) is, however, a superior effort because it was fitted to the star's typical formula. Bebe Daniels is once again the heroine/damsel in distress (she made a staggering 146 shorts with Lloyd according to the IMDb - apparently, only a handful of these have survived to make it into New Line's DVD collection devoted to the comic genius!).Incidentally, I had first come across BILLY BLAZES, ESQ. while in Hollywood late last year on TCM, as part of an all-night Harold Lloyd marathon shown in conjunction with the release of the 7-Disc Set (compiling 28 of his films made between 1919 and 1936). In the end, it easily emerges as the least among 7 of the star's Silent comedy shorts that I've watched up to this point.

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MartinHafer
1919/07/08

This is perhaps the oddest Harold Lloyd short I have ever seen. That's because in all the other full-length and short Lloyd films I've watched, he plays a wimpy guy who, at the end of the film, finds his courage and rises to the occasion. However, at the outset, Lloyd is seemingly with no fear and is invincible! The town is chock full of rogues, but when Harold comes into town, they are no match for him. His guns never seem to need re-loading, bullets somehow miss him and he can beat up even the biggest baddie! I was VERY relieved when the end of the film came that they did NOT take the cop-out approach and have it all end up being a dream. No, Harold was, perhaps, the prototype for the Terminator in this film! An odd but entertaining film to say the least!

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Snow Leopard
1919/07/09

This one reel comedy is a pretty good parody of the westerns of its time. It's nothing fancy, but it takes a light, upbeat approach and has some funny gag ideas. Harold Lloyd and Bebe Daniels always seem to work together well, and Snub Pollard is also here, in a smaller role.Lloyd plays the title character, who is a parody of the kinds of western heroes common both at the time and in many other eras. The character is probably based more than anything on the kinds of characters played by William S. Hart, but you wouldn't have to be familiar with Hart's movies to be able to enjoy most of "Billy Blazes".The story squeezes quite an assortment of familiar western elements and themes into 13 minutes or so of film, and it does a good job with most of them. The big showdown between Billy and the villain is played strictly for laughs, and it features some clever turns.

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