A rising star who rose from bit player to writer, director, and star of comedies for Mack Sennett's Keystone Film Company, Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle recruited up-and-coming vaudeville comic Buster Keaton for a series of films from 1917 through 1919. Presented chronologically, these shorts demonstrate Keaton's evolution from bit player to full partner as both men honed their comedic skills. Following the 1921 scandal that was inflamed by a publicity-seeking prosecutor and the tabloid press, Arbuckle's films were withdrawn from circulation in America. The films in this collection were gathered from international archives and private collections, with new English intertitles and digitally mastered from 35mm, some directly from the nitrate originals.
Yet, today we have community crime watch but, not yesterday!
bholsten1 8 months ago
@demoman87
This was made about eight years before "Gold Rush."
LKKruse 1 year ago
@demoman87
This was made eight years before "gold Rush."
LKKruse 1 year ago
Was this made before or after Chaplin's "Gold Rush"?? the reason i'm asking is because of 03:29
demoman87 1 year ago
more buster keaton please!
TheHuntress144 1 year ago
This is amazing stuff. God Bless Image Entertainment, Youtube and the Internet! :¬)
admanphoto 2 years ago
wooow!
thankyou!!
deftlink 2 years ago