Buster is thrown off a train near an amusement park. There he gets a job in a shooting gallery run by the Blinking Buzzards mob. Ordered to kill a businessman, he winds up protecting the man and his daughter by outfitting their home with trick devices.
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What a beautiful movie!
This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.
It is encouraging that the film ends so strongly.Otherwise, it wouldn't have been a particularly memorable film
Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.
Up until the thrilling conclusion, this seemed like a lesser Keaton film. Apparently Keaton himself wasn't thrilled with the results either, as he shelved this for a year before it was released--and only because Keaton had an injury and the public was clamoring for more films from this master comedian. However, given the amazing final portion of the film, I think Keaton was premature in holding the film from circulation as the overall product is excellent.The film begins with Buster looking for a job. Following an ad in a very strange newspaper, he applies for a job at a shooting gallery at the beach. The problem, however, is that they want an expert shot and Buster is a klutz. So, using some ingenuity, he is able to fake his way into a job. What he doesn't realize, however, is that the man who owns the business is actually the leader of a group of extortionists and assassins. The title of the film refers to the secret sign the members use to recognize each other. Well, because Buster did such a good job of convincing the guy he was a great shot, he is invited to join this secret society and he is given the job of killing a man--the same man who Buster already agreed to protect as a body guard! Once the gang discovers Buster is NOT going to kill the man, the film shoots into high gear--with amazing stunts in a house built specially for the film and using amazing camera work to show what is happening in all four rooms at the same time.Keaton's acrobatics are at their finest here and the film is a classic. Watch it!
The entrance of Buster Keaton's unnamed character in 'The High Sign (1921)' is, in some ways, reminiscent of Chaplin's Little Tramp persona. The wandering vagrant, named only Our Hero, is booted off a moving train, and lands in an unknown town, the audience denied any back-story or unnecessary exposition. Wandering into a nearby theme park, Buster deftly snatches a newspaper from a moving carousel (done so casually that he doesn't look like he's even trying), and attempts to read the mammoth broadsheet. In search of a job, he happens upon an opening for a talented sharp-shooter, and, despite inadvertently gunning down a duck with his practice shots, Buster feels that he's qualified enough for the position. Chaplin's Tramp was never averse to breaking the rules if he wasn't hurting anybody who didn't deserve it, and Keaton's Hero is no different. By rigging an ingenious dog-powered bell-ringer to falsify the carnival stall, Buster fools his massive employer into believing that he is an ace with the rifle.But, of course, if the plan had gone smoothly, then there wouldn't have been a story to tell. It seems that the employer is also a member of the Blinking Buzzards mob, a bold bad bunch of blood-thirsty bandits with a curious affinity for the letter "b." Buster is enlisted to assassinate one of the gang's enemies, and, by a curious turn of events, is also employed as that very same man's bodyguard (our hero, ever the hopeless romantic, accepts the latter job only to impress the target's pretty daughter, played by Bartine Burkett). When he steadfastly refuses to carry out the hit, Buster's reckless bid to escape the Buzzards' fists leads him on a farcical anarchic chase through concealed doorways and hidden compartments, a madcap comedic set-piece that never takes the time to slow down. Despite this memorable virtuoso finale, Keaton apparently felt unsure of the quality of his first independent two-reeler, and 'The High Sign' was shelved until the following year, when a broken ankle slowed the performer's output.
What amazes me in every Buster Keaton short is how good the physical action is. In 'The High Sign' he has the perfect setting to show us his tricks. In a house where there must be a secret escape in every room he has to escape from a couple of guys who do not like him very much because he betrayed them. He had to kill a certain person but faked the whole thing.The story in a Buster Keaton short is not that important. Once he starts doing those great things on screen I don't want it to end. The camera is able to see four rooms at the same time and Keaton moves from room to room, through walls and ceilings. It is all great.
A BUSTER KEATON Silent Short.Giving THE "HIGH SIGN" reveals members of the Blinking Buzzards, a nasty gang of ruffians who expect Buster to kill a wealthy old man - the same gentleman who's just hired Buster to be his bodyguard.Lots of physical comedy in this little film, as Keaton first fools around a shooting arcade and then gets to outwit the Buzzards in the old man's mansion. The ingenious cutaway set, showing at once four rooms on two floors, was sized specifically to Buster's proportions and it's fun watching him rapidly use the trap doors & secret panels while being chased by the villains.Born into a family of Vaudevillian acrobats, Buster Keaton (1895-1966) mastered physical comedy at a very early age. An association with Fatty Arbuckle led to a series of highly imaginative short subjects and classic, silent feature-length films - all from 1920 to 1928. Writer, director, star & stuntman - Buster could do it all and his intuitive genius gave him almost miraculous knowledge as to the intricacies of film making and of what it took to please an audience. More akin to Fairbanks than Chaplin, Buster's films were full of splendid adventure, exciting derring-do and the most dangerous physical stunts imaginable. His theme of a little man against the world, who triumphs through bravery & ingenuity, dominates his films. Through every calamity & disaster, Buster remained the Great Stone Face, a stoic survivor in a universe gone mad.In the late 1920's Buster was betrayed by his manager/brother-in-law and his contract was sold to MGM, which proceeded to nearly destroy his career. Teamed initially with Jimmy Durante and eventually allowed small roles in mediocre comedies, Buster was for 35 years consistently given work far beneath his talent. Finally, before lung cancer took him at age 70, he had the satisfaction of knowing that his classic films were being rediscovered. Now, well past his centenary, Buster Keaton is routinely recognized & appreciated as one of cinema's true authentic geniuses. And he knew how to make people laugh...