an astoundingly crisp image, without doubt the crispest i've ever seen for a film of this vintage, amazing. too bad there aren't more silent films that are preserved like this one.
@@OuterGalaxyLounge The dialogue screens should have the same amount of bounce, scratches, and brightness irregularities as everything else. I know it's extra work, but you know it's best.
It is widely reported that Farley wanted to do an Arbuckle bio-pic. Perhaps urban myth, but one has a hard time seeing someone else having pulled it off.
@@andymassinghamwhat I heard is that a ‘Fatty’ Arbuckle movie has been in the works for decades but the role is now seen as cursed because whenever they are close to starting the actor dies. Chris Farley and John Candy are two that I know of off the top of my head, that were considered for the role and died before filming.
You know, when I worked tech support on the phone for Comcast, I talked to a guy named Jon Arbuckle. I always kinda joked about it with my friends, I talked to a lot of people with interesting names, but now that I think of it, I can't help but wonder if he was related to you, and Roscoe. I worked there almost 15 years ago, so unfortunately I can't recall what state he was in. But I know we didn't service New York, or Kansas, where I understand he was born and lived, respectively. So, it could just be coincidence, or a very distant relative, perhaps. I'm not sure how common the name Arbuckle is, but you, Jon and Roscoe are the only people I've ever known to have it.
Thank you for posting this, it's a great film. More people need to see the genius that was Fatty Arbuckle. He got a raw deal, I would have loved if he could have made more movies.
Really wish they would make a movie about Roscoe Arbuckle. I knew at one time Chris Farley was supposed to play him in a movie before he passed. But I hope someday that they make a movie about him.
I'm always amazed by Roscoe's physical strength. I find him quite sturdy and handsome. If I had access to a time machine, I certainly wouldn't mind courting him. 🥰
@@manbearpig710 Oddly enough, Farley graduated from Marquette University two years after I did, which makes me think I may have seen him on campus at some point and simply had no idea I was crossing paths with a future star.
Chris Farley was the voice of Shrek as well. Farley had recorded 85% of the dialogue before he died. Mike Myers had to rerecord all the dialogue to finish the movie.
@@OuterGalaxyLounge I vaguely remember that Farley proposal. Might have changed Chris' life. Arbuckle was very famous, and then a terrible controversy end it all. He was a high liver, and Farley knew about such things.
Those two legends flirting with each other is just too precious 🤣🤣 I’m wondering if that’s Buster as the woman with the umbrella in the beginning? I know he often doubled as a stunt man in his own movies later on. Those look like his body movements but I could just be imagining it 😂 THANK YOU for posting this!!
It's great that this is so nearly perfectly preserved. I wonder about the script lines, however. Maybe a lip reader could complete the film. I am stunned by the physicality of the actors.
my word, i havent seen Fatty Arbuckle in many many decades, as a boy sitting at my mothers knee. my soul this is a real treat thank you so much for broadcasting this! ps i am subsribing to your channel thanks so much ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Absolutely superb film. It's only the second of Roscoe's film's I've seen but I'm now a fan. Was this the film which was on show when he had his legal problems?
Edison was trying to have talking movies as early as 1890 but there was no effective way yet to write the soundwave onto film. If he would have succeeded then sound movies would have happened 37 years earlier.
I've uploaded another good print of an Arbuckle comedy classic, The Cook, over at this link on my channel: ruclips.net/video/YLpjPh2Gdzo/видео.html Check it out.
" three copyright claimants have asserted they own the music on this, even though these are public domain piano rolls. I'm keeping the video up, because it's too much trouble to redo the soundtrack right now." So are they getting the ad revenue? Might be better to just make this silent film silent than let publishers auto-abuse RUclips's claim system.
Public domain means absolutely nothing to RUclips, whether it be film or music. My solution is to just stop posting this kind of material altogether and do other things.
I'm very familiar with the history of cinema and already knew that, but others may not. Readers of your comment may learn something. So, thanks for the comment.
Normally, I'd say something about the "stereotyping" of mental health and/or mental patients. But since this is 100 yrs old, and it's Roscoe and Buster, I'll give it a pass
an astoundingly crisp image, without doubt the crispest i've ever seen for a film of this vintage, amazing. too bad there aren't more silent films that are preserved like this one.
Believe it or not, it was crisper before I had to lower the resolution to process and upload the file. But thanks for the comment and for enjoying it.
@@OuterGalaxyLounge that’s crazy
@@OuterGalaxyLounge The dialogue screens should have the same amount of bounce, scratches, and brightness irregularities as everything else. I know it's extra work, but you know it's best.
It’s obviously been restored.
Love how Roscoe breaks the fourth wall at 17:05 with the wink to the camera.
Amazing, Fatty Arbuckle, Buster Keaton😍, and Al St Jhon together... 💕
Quite the cast.
And Alice Lake.
💜✨✨✨
Really good Movie! Roscoe and Buster always bring me to laughter.
Indeed.
RIP Roscoe. You were done A great injustice by those of cruel intent 🌹
I just realized that Chris Farley used to "borrow" some of Fatty's shtick. The shy fingers in mouth gags.
Good observation.
It is widely reported that Farley wanted to do an Arbuckle bio-pic. Perhaps urban myth, but one has a hard time seeing someone else having pulled it off.
@@andymassingham nah true just never ot off the round
@@andymassinghamwhat I heard is that a ‘Fatty’ Arbuckle movie has been in the works for decades but the role is now seen as cursed because whenever they are close to starting the actor dies. Chris Farley and John Candy are two that I know of off the top of my head, that were considered for the role and died before filming.
アル、アーバックル&キートン
3人揃ってるだけで面白い
アーバックルの女装は何度見てもかわいい
If he were alive today he would be known as Roscoe "Average Size" Arbuckle
That's true.
🤣 So very true!
100% truth. In a world of what used to be 98% slim people - which was the way it was when I grew up in the 1970's as well - he stood out.
This is a fun one. That's Joe Keaton in the bandages, Buster's dad.
Thanks good to know!
Roscoe checking to see if he’s “all there” post-op is a great, risqué gag. Superb print and great to see Buster at 23, cutting his teeth.
My great uncle wish I could have met him he made 1 million a movie 🎬
Highest paid star of his time, and deservedly so.
Even for a short like this? Seems like an awful lot of money.
@@tomk4590 Yeah, the contract was $1 million for three years and a lot of films, not just one film. The comment above mis-stated.
You know, when I worked tech support on the phone for Comcast, I talked to a guy named Jon Arbuckle. I always kinda joked about it with my friends, I talked to a lot of people with interesting names, but now that I think of it, I can't help but wonder if he was related to you, and Roscoe.
I worked there almost 15 years ago, so unfortunately I can't recall what state he was in. But I know we didn't service New York, or Kansas, where I understand he was born and lived, respectively. So, it could just be coincidence, or a very distant relative, perhaps.
I'm not sure how common the name Arbuckle is, but you, Jon and Roscoe are the only people I've ever known to have it.
Since Al St Jon was his uncle you would have been related to him as well.
For a big guy, Fatty Arbuckle could sure move! I love the first scene outside the store in the rain!
Thank you for posting this, it's a great film. More people need to see the genius that was Fatty Arbuckle. He got a raw deal, I would have loved if he could have made more movies.
I've read a lot about it, but everyone has their opinions on it. I remain neutral, even though I really like Arbuckle.
@@OuterGalaxyLounge Neutral is good. We can't turn back time anyway but we can appreciate he created.
What was cool was we actually did get to hear him speak later on in the early 1930s
Really wish they would make a movie about Roscoe Arbuckle. I knew at one time Chris Farley was supposed to play him in a movie before he passed. But I hope someday that they make a movie about him.
Well if they ever do I hope they're more fair to this, no ones perfect but he wasn't a rapist and murderer either... Such a talent and what a waste
Great, fantastic and immortal Roscoe Fatty ARBUCKLE!!! Respect forever!!! 👍👍👍
I'm always amazed by Roscoe's physical strength. I find him quite sturdy and handsome. If I had access to a time machine, I certainly wouldn't mind courting him. 🥰
That’s how I feel about Buster 😊 there’s just something about a man that can make you laugh!
Fantastic comedy and comedians.
The blond guy holding the can of ether is Al St. John.
Pretty funny guy!
Arbuckle's nephew and he is in a lot if not all of his movies. A great physical comedian.
Al was great in his own right, and could keep up with the best of them.
What's sad is he is not as appreciated like Arbuckle or Keaton. He certainly could hold his own and play any character.
A True Classic Comedy
More than a century later, they're still making us laugh.
Just got to this one. Hadn't seen it in entirety before. Great stuff.
Yes indeed. I adore the film.
This is wonderful beyond words : )
12:25 que cena bonita ❤
Os três tinham uma excelente química ❤❤❤❤
B. Keaton 💜✨
Really wish Chris Farley lived long enough to play roscoe. Even Farley said he was born for the roll
He certainly had the physical agility.
@@OuterGalaxyLounge if he was here I’m sure he’d appreciate that. Be smooth my fellow human... be smooth
@@manbearpig710 Oddly enough, Farley graduated from Marquette University two years after I did, which makes me think I may have seen him on campus at some point and simply had no idea I was crossing paths with a future star.
Chris Farley was the voice of Shrek as well. Farley had recorded 85% of the dialogue before he died. Mike Myers had to rerecord all the dialogue to finish the movie.
@@OuterGalaxyLounge I vaguely remember that Farley proposal. Might have changed Chris' life. Arbuckle was very famous, and then a terrible controversy end it all. He was a high liver, and Farley knew about such things.
Those two legends flirting with each other is just too precious 🤣🤣 I’m wondering if that’s Buster as the woman with the umbrella in the beginning? I know he often doubled as a stunt man in his own movies later on. Those look like his body movements but I could just be imagining it 😂 THANK YOU for posting this!!
It is Buster with the umbrella at the beginning, yeah.
It's great that this is so nearly perfectly preserved. I wonder about the script lines, however. Maybe a lip reader could complete the film. I am stunned by the physicality of the actors.
Alice Lake is so funny in this. “Help me get back in!”
Great time they had
I love the oldies, thanks.
2:40
Random dude: *falls*
Fatty: signals "safe at home plate"
"Good night nurse!" Is a phrase in my unconsciousness for awhile now....now I know where it came from
It became one of Archie Bunker's trademark phrases on "All in the Family" as well.
My mom used that expression in the 60s!
thank you from a 57 year old collector
You're welcome.
Wow that's cool I don't know much about my great uncle I would like to know more sir
Excelente humorista.
Vou ver todos os filmes que estiver no canal.
Arbuckle is great here, but with that flirting scene, Buster Keaton really steals the show.
Great quality! 👍
my word, i havent seen Fatty Arbuckle in many many decades, as a boy sitting at my mothers knee. my soul this is a real treat thank you so much for broadcasting this! ps i am subsribing to your channel thanks so much ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Thanks for enjoying and for commenting.
This was when California had water
It seems to me that the role of fatty arbuckle would have been a great fit for john pinette a little later in his life.
Actually Chris Farley was supposed to do it
The physical demands on characters is surprising. I wonder if they were bruised and battered after filming was done.
No doubt. And they probably thought nothing of it.
Led to morphine
@@jason698 I never realized that.
Thanks for posting.
They(Hollywood) did him wrong. To think that Chris Farley had the opportunity of a lifetime boggles my mind.
I sure do admire Roscoe's determination to get a cigarette lit in the pouring rain while drunk
🥃🌨️🚬
uma cuiosidade é que Keaton sorri
Farley's Arbuckle would've been so great.
I agree.
@@OuterGalaxyLounge I wonder if there are any screen tests etc. on record of Chris Farley working out how he was going to do Arbuckle.
Es una pena la vida de Roscoe después del escándalo, le cerraron todas las puertas y murió a los 45 años muy joven
Lamentablemente, eso es cierto.
Great actor
Bellissimo 😎
Absolutely superb film. It's only the second of Roscoe's film's I've seen but I'm now a fan. Was this the film which was on show when he had his legal problems?
No, that was a little bit later.
It seems so backwards to me that we had video before we could even put audio to it.
Edison was trying to have talking movies as early as 1890 but there was no effective way yet to write the soundwave onto film. If he would have succeeded then sound movies would have happened 37 years earlier.
Arbuckle did it all first. Keaton was his pupil.
Not for long though....
Keaton was on stage nearly before he could walk! His Dad used to throw him around in the act so this wasn't new to him just different.
Is it me, or does the guy in the tux & top hat at about 5:00 look like Martin Short?
Yeah, I can see that.
I've uploaded another good print of an Arbuckle comedy classic, The Cook, over at this link on my channel: ruclips.net/video/YLpjPh2Gdzo/видео.html
Check it out.
" three copyright claimants have asserted they own the music on this, even though these are public domain piano rolls. I'm keeping the video up, because it's too much trouble to redo the soundtrack right now."
So are they getting the ad revenue? Might be better to just make this silent film silent than let publishers auto-abuse RUclips's claim system.
Public domain means absolutely nothing to RUclips, whether it be film or music. My solution is to just stop posting this kind of material altogether and do other things.
At 5:50-5:58 I noticed a young JFK😅
LOL! 😂💗
that guy at 5:38 sure looks a lot like President Kennedy.
A cross between Kennedy and Oscar Levant, maybe
12:25 idk it looks cool tho
I a biopic can be make about fatty artbuckle
I am living in drought times. How much water was used?
He's really not that big,its the clothes that make him look bigger than what he really is.
He also was more muscular than what you see.
Roscoe does not have a lot of respect for the fourth wall.
And I respect that.
The reason his eyes look so unnatural is because the film of the time was orthochromatic.
I'm very familiar with the history of cinema and already knew that, but others may not. Readers of your comment may learn something. So, thanks for the comment.
Is that why the actors always look like they are wearing makeup back then?
Normally, I'd say something about the "stereotyping" of mental health and/or mental patients. But since this is 100 yrs old, and it's Roscoe and Buster, I'll give it a pass
There's a lot of stereotyping going on. Don't take it personally. It's comedy, and everything deserves to be made fun of.
ummm ... @20:40
Roscoe was a master but not as funny as Bustrer.