Country: United States
Director: Charley Chase
Stars: 'Snub' Pollard, Marie
Mosquini and Ernest Morrison
Release Date: 17 July 1921 (USA)
Production Co: Rolin Films
Sound Mix: Silent
Color: Black and White
Genres: Comedy | Short
The Australian-born Snub Pollard
is best remembered as supporting comedian to Harold Lloyd during Lloyd's late
Hal Roach period, but Pollard starred in his own comedy series ... of which the
funniest and most inventive example is probably "It's a Gift" (1923;
no relation to the W.C. Fields comedy of the same title). Pollard's starring
effort "At the Ringside" (1921) is an audacious rip-off of Charlie
Chaplin's 1917 classic "Easy Street" ... one of Chaplin's most
popular shorts which was still in widespread release when "At the Ringside"
was made.
"At the Ringside" is
filmed in a "slum" which is rather obviously a studio mock-up on the
Hal Roach back lot, and it clearly copies the Lambeth-style slum in Chaplin's
"Easy Street" (which was also a too-obvious mock-up). The first half
of this film is a blatant copy of "Easy Street". Pollard plays the
local constable, charged with maintaining order in the tough slum district. He
runs afoul of the local bully, played by Noah Young (an underrated comic actor
who usually played roughnecks and dimwits in Harold Lloyd movies). Young has
sense enough not to imitate Eric Campbell, his counterpart in "Easy
Street". To his credit, Pollard is playing his own comic character here
... not imitating Chaplin, even though the source material is so obviously
Chaplin's.
Halfway through, "At the
Ringside" suddenly abandons its "Easy Street" rip-off and shows
some originality. Young challenges Pollard to a boxing match in a
hastily-erected outdoor boxing ring. From here, the film degenerates into fairly
predictable slapstick gags on the pugilism theme ... with one remarkable
surprise. Midpoint in the boxing match, Pollard gets a severe blow to the head
which rocks him. Then we see a subjective shot as the scenery around Pollard
breaks up into jigsaw-puzzle pieces (against a black background) and fades into
a blur. This was so totally unexpected, I thought that the film was breaking
apart in the projector. The blur comes back into focus and the jigsaw pieces
join up again, as Pollard shakes his head and gets back into the fight. The
camera work and editing in this brief sequence are far more inventive than ANY
of the camera work and editing at any point in Chaplin's entire film career.
This one trick shot in "At the Ringside" more than makes up for any lack
of originality throughout the rest of the film.
Pollard's leading lady in this
short is dark-haired Marie Mosquini, very young and quite pretty even by modern
standards. Ms Mosquini gave up her lacklustre acting career to marry the
inventor Lee De Forrest, a pioneer of radio technology.
"At the Ringside" is a
decent-enough slapstick comedy, funny but not hilarious, and it offers a sort
of parallel-universe version of one of Chaplin's best-known films.
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