Country: United States
Language: English (intertitles)
Director: Leo McCarey
Writer: H.M. Walker (titles)
Stars: Charley Chase, Katherine
Grant and Jane Sherman
Release Date: 2 August 1925 (USA)
Production Co: Hal Roach Studios
Sound Mix: Silent
Color: Black and White
Plot Keywords: Party | Seance |
Fake Suicide | Dancing | Gunfire |
Spiritualist | Jealousy | Hotel Detective | Chase | Flat Tire | Friendship
Genres: Comedy | Short
Despite his faithfulness, Melvin
is always under suspicion by wife Mame. Complications erupt when a woman from a
party across the hall passes out in Melvin's bedroom just before Mame returns.
Perhaps you've heard about the
great-but-neglected comedian Charley Chase, and perhaps you wonder what was so
great about him. If so, this little gem from Chase's silent era heyday would be
a good place to start an acquaintance. Judged on a bare plot outline INNOCENT
HUSBANDS may sound like a run-of-the-mill marital farce, the sort of dreary
two-reeler comics like Leon Errol cranked out by the dozen, but the difference
lies in the execution. Charley Chase was a charming, agile performer with a
highly expressive face and a lanky build, rather like a cross between Dick Van
Dyke and John Cleese. Chase also possessed a gift for physical comedy and a
fertile imagination for gags, which he demonstrated not only in his own movies
but also when he directed films featuring his peers.
When we talk about "physical
comedy," by the way, it doesn’t mean the sort of primitive butt-kicking
slapstick found in the early Mack Sennett comedies. Like many of his
contemporaries Charley Chase's film-making apprenticeship took place at the
Keystone Studio during World War I, but by the '20s he'd refined his skills to
the point where his work was comparatively sophisticated, with an occasional
touch of the risqué. One example from this film: when Charley is sent to an
apartment building to fetch a young lady to bring to a party, he is told to
stand in front of her building and whistle three times; she'll throw down her room
key. Charley dutifully stands before the building and whistles three times--
and is pelted with dozens of keys! Maybe that isn't your idea of
"sophisticated," but it's miles ahead of a Keystone food fight. Next
we have a funny scene where Charley actually has to fend off the hot-to-trot
young lady in the back of a cab. He's not merely an innocent husband, but one
who has to FIGHT to uphold his virtue!
This is the sort of farce in
which an obsessively jealous wife tries to catch her husband cheating, and he
eventually winds up-- innocently, of course --with an unconscious floozy in his
bedroom, scrambling to conceal her presence. Again, what makes it work is the
freshness Chase brings to this admittedly familiar material. A highlight comes
early on, when Melvin (Charley's character) tells his wife Mame that he's
become so tired of her suspicions he's going to end it all. He stomps into the
next room, finds a revolver, fires it into the floor and falls in a histrionic
manner. No response. So, naturally, he does it again. Still nothing. Now Mame
opens the door to watch as Melvin performs this ridiculous act a third time.
Flat on the floor Melvin looks up, realizes Mame is watching, and quickly
resumes playing dead. This may not sound so funny in the telling, and God knows
plenty of hack comics have performed similar routines to little effect, but,
when Charley Chase does this, it's funny. INNOCENT HUSBANDS is a comic treat
that deserves to be better known, and so does its star performer.
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