Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

Open, general discussion of silent films, personalities and history.
  • Author
  • Message
Offline
User avatar

SteppenBow59

  • Posts: 374
  • Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2012 6:07 pm
  • Location: Houston, Texas

Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostThu Apr 26, 2012 4:31 pm

Can anybody name any cases of vehicular disasters in any silent film? This is what I'm talking about: in the Buster Keaton short The Scarecrow, Buster's rival for the attentions of Sybil Seely is hit by a truck (forgot what he was doing in the middle of the road to begin with), and the truck driver (played by Edward F. Cline) stops, looks out the window, dismisses the whole thing and promptly drives off. My sadistic sense of humor found that to be the funniest sequence in the entire short 8) - though most certainly not as ingenious as the house Buster and that guy was living in.
Plus, as a bonus, the dog chasing Buster was played by Luke the dog! :twisted:
Well, anyway, (to irritatingly reiterate what I already said) that's what I'm looking for - vehicular disasters in silent film.

Martie
Last edited by SteppenBow59 on Thu Apr 26, 2012 10:38 pm, edited 2 times in total.
~ Martie Opelle
http://ourladyofwhims.com/

Mej Bow is lekker!
Offline
User avatar

Ed Watz

  • Posts: 227
  • Joined: Sun Dec 30, 2007 5:47 pm
  • Location: Germany (somewhere in Europe)

Re: Vehicle Hit-&-Runs in Silent Film

PostThu Apr 26, 2012 7:00 pm

Harold Lloyd in his Keystone days as the fruit peddler who goes into acrobatic gyrations as his cart is repeatedly smashed and destroyed by criminals and police alike, in LOVE, LOOT & CRASH (1915).
Offline
User avatar

SteppenBow59

  • Posts: 374
  • Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2012 6:07 pm
  • Location: Houston, Texas

Re: Vehicle Hit-&-Runs in Silent Film

PostThu Apr 26, 2012 8:21 pm

Ed Watz wrote:Harold Lloyd in his Keystone days as the fruit peddler who goes into acrobatic gyrations as his cart is repeatedly smashed and destroyed by criminals and police alike, in LOVE, LOOT & CRASH (1915).

Damn, that sounds hilarious! I gotta track that 'un down sometime soon!

Martie
~ Martie Opelle
http://ourladyofwhims.com/

Mej Bow is lekker!
Offline
User avatar

silentfilm

Moderator

  • Posts: 6800
  • Joined: Tue Dec 18, 2007 12:31 pm
  • Location: Dallas, TX USA

Re: Vehicle Hit-&-Runs in Silent Film

PostThu Apr 26, 2012 8:24 pm

Image
Edgar Kennedy, Clara Guiol, Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel in Two Tars (1928)
Offline
User avatar

SteppenBow59

  • Posts: 374
  • Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2012 6:07 pm
  • Location: Houston, Texas

Re: Vehicle Hit-&-Runs in Silent Film

PostThu Apr 26, 2012 9:31 pm

silentfilm wrote:Image
Edgar Kennedy, Clara Guiol, Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel in Two Tars (1928)

Thanks, Bruce! Another one for the list!
*scribbles on notebook*

Martie
~ Martie Opelle
http://ourladyofwhims.com/

Mej Bow is lekker!
Offline
User avatar

Jack Theakston

  • Posts: 1538
  • Joined: Tue Dec 18, 2007 3:25 pm
  • Location: New York, USA

Re: Vehicle Hit-&-Runs in Silent Film

PostThu Apr 26, 2012 9:47 pm

THE RACKET (1928) has George E. Stone performing a hit-and-run. THE GREAT GATSBY (1926), although lost, has a hit-and-run figure prominently into its plot, of course.
J. Theakston
Capitol Theatre, Rome, NY
"You get more out of life when you go out to a movie!"
Offline
User avatar

SteppenBow59

  • Posts: 374
  • Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2012 6:07 pm
  • Location: Houston, Texas

Re: Vehicle Hit-&-Runs in Silent Film

PostThu Apr 26, 2012 10:25 pm

I think we might as well just list any vehicular disaster in silent film, rather than just hit-&-run disasters.

Martie
~ Martie Opelle
http://ourladyofwhims.com/

Mej Bow is lekker!
Offline
User avatar

Brooksie

  • Posts: 1315
  • Joined: Wed Jun 30, 2010 6:41 pm
  • Location: Portland, Oregon via Sydney, Australia

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostThu Apr 26, 2012 11:17 pm

Not a comedy, but Cecil B. DeMille's 'Manslaughter' (1922) has one such incident as its central plot point.
Offline
User avatar

entredeuxguerres

  • Posts: 1362
  • Joined: Sat Feb 11, 2012 12:46 pm
  • Location: Empire State

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 12:13 am

How 'bout an almost-silent? For the Defense, 1930--Kay Francis croaks a pedestrian who got in her way. (Being run over by Kay Francis; that would be something.)

Here's something peculiar: that fabulous white British roadster Garbo wraps around a tree in Woman of Affairs survived its injuries, because it shows up again driven by Diana Wynyard in One More River. How'd it get from MGM to Universal?
Offline
User avatar

Christopher Jacobs

Moderator

  • Posts: 1407
  • Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 12:53 pm
  • Location: Grand Forks, North Dakota

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 1:16 am

A major traumatic sequence in THE CROWD involves a traffic accident. (immediately following which, Tchichovsky's "Pathetique" makes for appropriate musical accompaniment.)
Offline
User avatar

Ed Watz

  • Posts: 227
  • Joined: Sun Dec 30, 2007 5:47 pm
  • Location: Germany (somewhere in Europe)

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 5:53 am

For a relatively brief series, Max Davidson experienced a high number of vehicular mishaps in his Hal Roach comedies. JEWISH PRUDENCE centers around a lawsuit involving a bus accident. Max tends to have a lot of bad luck with cars (mostly Model Ts) and in two other shorts an accident in a roadster transports him from rumble seat to beneath the engine's hood. In CALL OF THE CUCKOO his parked Ford is demolished by a careening piano. Poor Max! A great comedian, get the Filmmuseum DVD set!
Offline
User avatar

FrankFay

  • Posts: 2457
  • Joined: Thu Jan 03, 2008 11:48 am
  • Location: albany NY

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 6:00 am

One of the earliest British trick films (I can't find the title) concerns an auto. A car drives into the picture and stops, and after a moment suddenly explodes. Pieces of machinery and body parts fall from the top of the frame and a policeman walks over and begins in a laconic manner to make an inventory in his notebook.
Eric Stott
Offline
User avatar

Ed Watz

  • Posts: 227
  • Joined: Sun Dec 30, 2007 5:47 pm
  • Location: Germany (somewhere in Europe)

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 6:06 am

FrankFay wrote:One of the earliest British trick films (EXTRAORDINARY CAB ACCIDENT, 1903) concerns an auto. A car drives into the picture and stops, and after a moment suddenly explodes. Pieces of machinery and body parts fall from the top of the frame and a policeman walks over and begins in a laconic manner to make an inventory in his notebook.


I have a copy of that short, though I believe my copy is titled AN AUTOMOBILE EXPLOSION. It's nice to see a Pythonesque sight gag near the start of filmdom, as well as the patented British art of Understatement at it's best...well done.
Offline
User avatar

Rodney

  • Posts: 1660
  • Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2008 11:09 am
  • Location: Louisville, Colorado

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 7:00 am

It would almost be easier to make a list of comedies that DON'T have vehicular accidents... Harold Lloyd's Hot Water has quite a series, as do most of his features. Buster Keaton crashes trains, boats, balloons, and automobiles in his films (does having a car sink count as a car or boat accident?), and memorably has an old car that disintegrates on a road bump in The Three Ages. And we can add The Artist as a recent addition to the canon, though I think they faked the crashed car (them vintage automobiles ain't cheap).

As for the hit and run from The Scarecrow (the irony there is that Big Joe Roberts, the victim, is crossing the street to bring Buster some dog bite medicine while Buster is being chased by Luke, who is thought to be rabid because of the meringue pie he ate; but Roberts ends up needing the first aid supplies himself) there's a nice version of that in Wings where the doughboy victim, not badly hurt, decides to fake it when he realizes that Clara Bow was at the wheel. He gets some nice female sympathy for his pains.

In one of my film books (Parade's Gone By?) the author shows a still of Harold Lloyd with his car crushed by a train. He points out that it's a different car than the one in the actual film, showing that Lloyd destroyed one car for the film, then (for some reason) destroyed a second car for the publicity still.

One of the more impressive train incidents is at the end of Beggars of Life, where a flaming caboose plunges into a canyon. The whole sequence impresses me every time.
Rodney Sauer
The Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra
www.mont-alto.com
"Let the Music do the Talking!"
Offline

SilentEchoes57

  • Posts: 111
  • Joined: Thu May 13, 2010 12:43 am

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 8:12 am

Rodney wrote:It would almost be easier to make a list of comedies that DON'T have vehicular accidents... Harold Lloyd's Hot Water has quite a series, as do most of his features. Buster Keaton crashes trains, boats, balloons, and automobiles in his films (does having a car sink count as a car or boat accident?), and memorably has an old car that disintegrates on a road bump in The Three Ages. And we can add The Artist as a recent addition to the canon, though I think they faked the crashed car (them vintage automobiles ain't cheap).

As for the hit and run from The Scarecrow (the irony there is that Big Joe Roberts, the victim, is crossing the street to bring Buster some dog bite medicine while Buster is being chased by Luke, who is thought to be rabid because of the meringue pie he ate; but Roberts ends up needing the first aid supplies himself) there's a nice version of that in Wings where the doughboy victim, not badly hurt, decides to fake it when he realizes that Clara Bow was at the wheel. He gets some nice female sympathy for his pains.

In one of my film books (Parade's Gone By?) the author shows a still of Harold Lloyd with his car crushed by a train. He points out that it's a different car than the one in the actual film, showing that Lloyd destroyed one car for the film, then (for some reason) destroyed a second car for the publicity still.

One of the more impressive train incidents is at the end of Beggars of Life, where a flaming caboose plunges into a canyon. The whole sequence impresses me every time.


Yes - in For Heaven's Sake Harold Lloyd's recently purchased limousine is stalled on some train tracks and demolished. Earlier another of his cars is destroyed in an accident.

Buster Keaton's little roadster is also hit by a train, similar to the gag in One Week, in his talkie Parlor, Bedroom and Bath.
Offline
User avatar

missdupont

  • Posts: 1519
  • Joined: Mon Sep 07, 2009 9:48 pm
  • Location: California

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 8:21 am

There's the Laurel and Hardy short in which the boys and their car are crunched by the streetcar.
Offline
User avatar

Ed Watz

  • Posts: 227
  • Joined: Sun Dec 30, 2007 5:47 pm
  • Location: Germany (somewhere in Europe)

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 10:37 am

Rodney wrote:It would almost be easier to make a list of comedies that DON'T have vehicular accidents...


After his debut film MAKING A LIVING (which features a spectacular car wreck), Charlie Chaplin's films almost NEVER indulge in another vehicular accident for his next 75 or so movies...that is, until his final silent film, MODERN TIMES (the overturned paddy wagon from which he and Paulette make their escape).

Coincidental -- or what?
Offline
User avatar

silentfilm

Moderator

  • Posts: 6800
  • Joined: Tue Dec 18, 2007 12:31 pm
  • Location: Dallas, TX USA

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 10:53 am

missdupont wrote:There's the Laurel and Hardy short in which the boys and their car are crunched by the streetcar.


That would be Hog Wild (1930).
Offline

rollot24

  • Posts: 806
  • Joined: Wed Dec 19, 2007 4:16 pm
  • Location: Bellevue WA

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 10:55 am

entredeuxguerres wrote:How 'bout an almost-silent? For the Defense, 1930--Kay Francis croaks a pedestrian who got in her way.


Kay Francis can run over me anytime :)
Offline
User avatar

SteppenBow59

  • Posts: 374
  • Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2012 6:07 pm
  • Location: Houston, Texas

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 3:00 pm

FrankFay wrote:One of the earliest British trick films (I can't find the title) concerns an auto. A car drives into the picture and stops, and after a moment suddenly explodes. Pieces of machinery and body parts fall from the top of the frame and a policeman walks over and begins in a laconic manner to make an inventory in his notebook.

Damn! Sounds pretty hardcore.

Martie
~ Martie Opelle
http://ourladyofwhims.com/

Mej Bow is lekker!
Offline
User avatar

mndean

  • Posts: 712
  • Joined: Sat Mar 19, 2011 2:04 pm
  • Location: Sacramento, CA

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 4:50 pm

If this wasn't the silent section, I'd mention the car/streetcar wreck that kicks off The Nuisance.
Offline
User avatar

SteppenBow59

  • Posts: 374
  • Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2012 6:07 pm
  • Location: Houston, Texas

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 5:07 pm

mndean wrote:If this wasn't the silent section, I'd mention the car/streetcar wreck that kicks off The Nuisance.

Ah, but you did mention it.

Martie
~ Martie Opelle
http://ourladyofwhims.com/

Mej Bow is lekker!
Offline
User avatar

mndean

  • Posts: 712
  • Joined: Sat Mar 19, 2011 2:04 pm
  • Location: Sacramento, CA

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 8:08 pm

SteppenBow59 wrote:
mndean wrote:If this wasn't the silent section, I'd mention the car/streetcar wreck that kicks off The Nuisance.

Ah, but you did mention it.

Martie


Ssssssh!
Offline
User avatar

entredeuxguerres

  • Posts: 1362
  • Joined: Sat Feb 11, 2012 12:46 pm
  • Location: Empire State

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 8:47 pm

mndean wrote:Ssssssh!


Yes, please keep quiet about it--it's disconcerting, this time of night, to be reminded of that drop-dead gorgeous hunk o' pfirmly-packed pulchritude called Madge Evans.
Offline
User avatar

Roseha

  • Posts: 211
  • Joined: Tue Aug 30, 2011 10:19 pm
  • Location: New York City

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 9:07 pm

I believe Buster was quoted as saying that the audience didn't like seeing a brand new car destroyed, that he had to use one that was a little beat up beforehand.
- Rosemary
Offline
User avatar

Rodney

  • Posts: 1660
  • Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2008 11:09 am
  • Location: Louisville, Colorado

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 9:21 pm

Roseha wrote:I believe Buster was quoted as saying that the audience didn't like seeing a brand new car destroyed, that he had to use one that was a little beat up beforehand.


I think that was in reference to The Blacksmith, where a very nice car is destroyed, and it didn't go over well with audiences. He explained that as a reason why they didn't sink or explode the ship in The Navigator. Also, probably, worth too much as scrap to ruin a huge ship for a movie....
Rodney Sauer
The Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra
www.mont-alto.com
"Let the Music do the Talking!"
Offline

LongRider

  • Posts: 145
  • Joined: Tue Feb 01, 2011 7:16 pm
  • Location: North of Sin City, West of La La Land

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 10:02 pm

Rodney wrote:
Roseha wrote:I believe Buster was quoted as saying that the audience didn't like seeing a brand new car destroyed, that he had to use one that was a little beat up beforehand.


I think that was in reference to The Blacksmith, where a very nice car is destroyed, and it didn't go over well with audiences. He explained that as a reason why they didn't sink or explode the ship in The Navigator. Also, probably, worth too much as scrap to ruin a huge ship for a movie....


Guess he changed his mind about that when he wrecked the Texas in THE GENERAL. Tho' the Texas did end up making some nice scrap iron when WW2 rolled around from what I've heard.

The wrecked car in THE BLACKSMITH didn't bother me as much as black hand prints on that pristine, gorgeous white horse. Now that was a wreck!

:mrgreen:
Cheers,
Maureen
Offline
User avatar

entredeuxguerres

  • Posts: 1362
  • Joined: Sat Feb 11, 2012 12:46 pm
  • Location: Empire State

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 10:32 pm

LongRider wrote:Guess he changed his mind about that when he wrecked the Texas in THE GENERAL. Tho' the Texas did end up making some nice scrap iron when WW2 rolled around from what I've heard.


Lord, hope you don't mean the original Civil War Texas, & not some stand-in locomotive.
Offline

LongRider

  • Posts: 145
  • Joined: Tue Feb 01, 2011 7:16 pm
  • Location: North of Sin City, West of La La Land

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostFri Apr 27, 2012 10:42 pm

entredeuxguerres wrote:
LongRider wrote:Guess he changed his mind about that when he wrecked the Texas in THE GENERAL. Tho' the Texas did end up making some nice scrap iron when WW2 rolled around from what I've heard.


Lord, hope you don't mean the original Civil War Texas, & not some stand-in locomotive.


Some stand in.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjH75LOuybo
Cheers,
Maureen
Offline
User avatar

SteppenBow59

  • Posts: 374
  • Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2012 6:07 pm
  • Location: Houston, Texas

Re: Vehicular Disasters in Silent Film

PostSat Apr 28, 2012 12:29 am

The Blacksmith turned into a horror movie for me - the way that beautiful, luxurious, showroom-ready looking car was smashed in so many unlikely ways. The rest of the short I was perfectly okay with, but that car... damn, just damn!
I didn't realize a Keaton short could impact me so emotionally.

Martie
~ Martie Opelle
http://ourladyofwhims.com/

Mej Bow is lekker!
Next

Return to Talking About Silents

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests