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HaroldLloyd Tagged Articles at Cinematical

RvB's After Images: The Penalty (1920)

Filed under: Classics », Critical Thought », Cinematical Indie »




On some occasions Anthony Lane of the New Yorker is a real mug. However, he certainly was right in his Spider-Man 3 review. He wrote that the transformation--a literal pulverization, a "turning into powder"--of Thomas Haden Church's Flint Marko was the most interesting part of the blockbuster. But isn't this always the case? Superhero movies quicken the adolescent inside a viewer, and the most savory part is the detail about how people are warped into super-villains. Ex-teens remember the horrific transformations. the mysterious energies and compulsions, and the new, secret identities we grew.

Beside this, it seems that Sam Raimi is trying to channel certain silent movie ideas in his Spider-Man series. Peter Parker must have been based by Steve Ditko on the figure of Harold Lloyd, eager bespectacled kid that he is. It's easy to juxtapose the climb up the tower in Lloyd's Safety Last with Doctor Octopus pursuing Spider-Man up the clock-tower of a skyscraper in Spider-Man 2. Watching Thomas Hayden Church in Spider-Man 3 was a different kind of flashback. With his jaw filled out with some kind of prosthetic, and his ears pushed forward, and that old-time bully's sweater (the kind that thugs used to wear 80 years ago, along with derbies and checked suits) Hayden seems to be honoring the monarch of all screen villains, Lon Chaney. And an excellent place to start a study of Chaney is with one of his most insane films, 1920's The Penalty.

Finally! The Harold Lloyd Comedy Collection on DVD

Filed under: Classics », New Line », Home Entertainment »

Harold Lloyd coming to DVDHarold Lloyd was an unusual film star in that he owned the copyright on most of his films. His granddaughter Suzanne Lloyd currently owns the rights and has been very particular about the conditions under which the films are shown. Up until now, most of Lloyd's films have been unavailable on DVD. I saw The Freshman at a local theater earlier this year and figured that was the only way I'd get to see the movie anytime soon.

So it is a genuine pleasure to learn that New Line Entertainment is releasing The Harold Lloyd Comedy Collection on November 15. The seven-DVD boxed set includes 15 of Lloyd's feature films, including the well-known Safety Last (where he hangs from the clock) and The Freshman, and 10 short films. The films are divided into three volumes, each of which also will be sold separately. I don't understand quite how the volumes are organized, since it's not by date. DVD Times has details on each volume and on the DVD of extra features that will be available only in the boxed set. You also get some 3D photos and 3D Lloyd-style glasses, although I already have a pair that came with my copy of Harold Lloyd's Hollywood Nudes in 3D. Um, it was a gift. From my sister. I should just stop talking now, shouldn't I.
 
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