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Buster Keaton's Crazy Stunts & Comedy (Supercut) 

François R. Whyte - Filmmaker
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A tribute to the best director, comedian and stuntman in the History of cinema, the one and only Buster Keaton!
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Music
"Public Enemy Pt.1 & 2" by Odd Chap
• Odd Chap - Public Enem...
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Outro Music by
Steve Toppa
Including the films:
Three Ages (1923)
Neighbors (1921)
The Goat (1921)
Cops (1922)
Seven Chances (1927)
Sherlock Jr. (1924)
Convict 13 (1920)
The Balloonatic (1923)
The Electric House (1922)
The Blacksmith (1922)
Steamboat Bill Jr. (1928)
Spite Marriage (1929)
The Frozen North (1922)
The Navigator (1924)
One Week (1920)
The Cameraman (1928)
The High Sign (1921)
College (1927)
Battling Butler (1926)
The General (1927)
Day Dreams (1922)
The Boat (1921)
The Love Nest (1923)
The Haunted House (1921)
Grand Slam Opera (1936)
The Love Nest (1923)
The Scarecrow (1920)
My Wife's Relations (1922)
Thank you for watching! Hope you enjoyed!

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18 авг 2022

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Комментарии : 237   
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Activate the subtitles for the movie titles. :)
@sintay8002
@sintay8002 Год назад
That would be cool
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
@@sintay8002 I'm not too sure I understand your comment? If you click on the CC icon, you can already get the titles. :)
@chegadesuade
@chegadesuade Год назад
Buster Keaton is 0% special effects, 100% talent
@john_blues
@john_blues Год назад
0 CGI, but he definitely used special effects. Camera tricks and other effects. Not knocking it, I'm still amazed by what he did 100 years ago.
@heliopyre
@heliopyre Год назад
it's a nitpick, but you mean visual effects. specials effects are in-camera effects, like the wind he's walking into. rain from a sprinkler system is a special effect, rain from a simulation and composite is a visual effect.
@borntoclimb7116
@borntoclimb7116 Год назад
True
@Radb707
@Radb707 8 месяцев назад
There's lot of camera tricks and stuff used. Rear projection, which was used even up to Terminator 2. He did match cuts and clever editing. There's miniature work. There was a whole sequence that used the same technique Parent Trap and Back to the Future 2 would use to have the same actor in the frame twice. But it was all talent.
@DaveDunning-st1hh
@DaveDunning-st1hh 24 дня назад
Buster's use of camera tricks was ' talent ', No one had done such before. He was a pioneer, an innovater
@bigkev19
@bigkev19 Год назад
This guy was on a different level of stunt men. How he survived back then is amazing.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Yes, it's crazy! He's in a category of his own with Jackie Chan.
@joedaodragon3565
@joedaodragon3565 Год назад
@@misterwhyte haha! Ya, I thought Jackie Chan too.
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan Год назад
That's right, bigkev. He also devised all the stunts. He injured his neck in a water tower scene, broke it in fact, but didn't know till years later!
@akaiseigo5664
@akaiseigo5664 Год назад
@@misterwhyte in one of his interviews, Jackie Chan said he was a big fan of Buster Keaton.
@micmul23
@micmul23 Год назад
No CGI, real stunts and still looks damn good after 100 years. That's class.
@echoecho3108
@echoecho3108 7 месяцев назад
Thanx so much for sharing! Buster Keaton. Née Joseph Francis Keaton IV. ('Buster' was a nickname given to him, after a tumble down a flight of stairs when he was only six months old. When he fell, everyone ran to help. Buster landed at the bottom of the stairs, shook his head, and sat up, miraculously unhurt, and a family friend, Harry Houdini [Yes. That Houdini], the Keaton's partner in The Keaton-Houdini Medicine Show, said, "That was sure a buster!" Back then, 'buster' meant a fall, or a bronco buster. It was not used as a name. Buster's dad said that 'Buster' would be a good thing to call his son, and the nickname stuck. When the four of them went into Vaudeville, Houdini became a solo act, and Buster and his mom and dad became The Three Keatons.) What a Man. He could do it All. And did! No CGI. What you saw was All Buster. So athletic. Wrote. Directed. Produced. Acted. Comedy. Drama. Composed, played, and sang. Danced, too. Conceived and executed stunts. Designed and built machines and props for gags. The famous watertower torrent broke his neck! ('Sherlock Jr.' --- Buster didn't account for such water pressure And he didn't know he'd broken his neck 'til, I think he said it was 13, years later at a routine exam when his doctor asked him when he broke his neck. Buster thought back and said he'd been knocked down hard by falling water, and hit his head on the train rail, and asked if that could be when it happened. The doctor told him it probably was.) And, oh, that well-known falling housefront bit! ('Steamboat Bill Jr.' --- He only had about a 2" clearance in that window frame. And the housefront weighed 1500 lbs.) The rocks and boulders he's often seen running from ('Seven Chances') may not have been real rocks, but those papier-maché props weighed up to 400 lbs. Quite impressive! The Great Stone Face. (Buster found out during his time in Vaudeville with his parents, that if he laughed during a bit, the audience didn't, so he trained himself to keep a straight face all the time.) The Greatest of All Time! A really Great guy. The true Iron Man: broke most every bone in his body, and kept going. And . . . He had pinpoint accuracy with a custard pie at 27 feet, even in his later years! RIP, darling Buster, and thanx so very much for the magic, music, and memories. (Yes. I absolutely adore Buster Keaton. For 70+ years now.)
@shawnreed6895
@shawnreed6895 3 месяца назад
Actually, he was 18 months old when that happened.
@Cluv22
@Cluv22 Год назад
He was WAY ahead of his time!
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Agreed!
@russthompson9080
@russthompson9080 Год назад
When he sits in the spare wheel and the car drives away... I genuinely laughed. Something I haven't done in a long time.
@AvatarYoda
@AvatarYoda Год назад
It was so unexpected, I'm not even wondering why there's a mounted tire just sitting in the road.
@VolcanoTimeLapse
@VolcanoTimeLapse Год назад
i laughed too..very rare.
@sarahewson3607
@sarahewson3607 2 месяца назад
He always makes me laugh out loud, no matter how bad I feel. He is so amazing. I can’t say there’s anything in this world that is guaranteed to make me smile, much less laugh. Only Buster 🤩
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan Год назад
Keaton was a true original. There were many silent screen comics, ( Charlie Chaplin, Harold Lloyd, Harry Langdon, Charlie Chase, ) but Buster's deadpan delivery plus spectacular stunts were incomparable.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Agreed! He's my favorite too!
@daveerickson9524
@daveerickson9524 Год назад
100pc agreed. My favorite comedian (some would argue; it comes down to taste) but finest stuntman and yes, a brilliant, often underestimated director. Everything is planned and comes off as spontaneous. He did so many things for the first time ever and the imagination is quite astonishing, always delightful. Keaton builds pace and creates tension like no-one else. The word "genius" gets thrown around a lot but here it is. Bravo Buster
@StrongStyleFiction
@StrongStyleFiction Год назад
Dude. Phenominal supercut. One of the best I've sewn for Buster Keaton.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Thanks!! That means a lot! Don't hesitate to subscribe, I'm preparing more supercuts for other directors / actors. :)
@user-rq6hn5bm1x
@user-rq6hn5bm1x Год назад
Непревзойдённый трюкач . Вечная память Бастеру .
@depaola63
@depaola63 Год назад
Absolutely LEGENDARY ✊❤️⭐️
@heliopyre
@heliopyre Год назад
you can't help but be in awe
@jounisyrjanen2226
@jounisyrjanen2226 Год назад
My other son told me a couple of hours ago that nowadays people can create magical movie scenes with technology. Well, had to tell him about Buster and show what kind of creativity and talent we should cherish... Thanks, subscribed!
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Thanks a lot! I hope your son enjoyed it! Directors were very creative way before CGI for sure. If you want to blow his mind, show him the Méliès supercut I did and tell him it was all done on camera. Mind blowing stuff!
@jounisyrjanen2226
@jounisyrjanen2226 Год назад
@@misterwhyte Will do! And Ray Harryhausen: Jason and the Argonauts (1963). Skeletons took some time = stop motion animation 🖖
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
@@jounisyrjanen2226 Haha funny you say that, I started working on a Harryhausen tribute! Coming soon!
@melissacooper8724
@melissacooper8724 Год назад
I believe that the effects from Buster's time are more magical than today! I especially enjoyed Melise's film A Trip To The Moon!
@jounisyrjanen2226
@jounisyrjanen2226 Год назад
@@melissacooper8724 My point exactly! Trip to the moon is a classic. Buster had such an agile computer - on his shoulders that is. Physically he was better than stuntmen...💪
@labyfan1313
@labyfan1313 Месяц назад
Absolutely LOVE this video! The music is spot on and is timed perfectly with the shots. Love that it has a slow section too. I'm 37 and I'm just discovering Buster Keaton and I can't get enough of him.
@JWD1992
@JWD1992 Год назад
I have heard the name over the years, but never saw his work. First impression: comedian, acrobat, and magician all at once. WOW.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it! Try and watch his movies now! I highly recommend The General, it's his masterpiece.
@peterscharf6429
@peterscharf6429 Год назад
​@@misterwhyte and The General was the most expensive cost silent movie.
@peterscharf6429
@peterscharf6429 Год назад
And for many years the movie that cost the most, unfortunately it was no a big deal in these days on cinema an Keatons Company didn't get well with this😢
@Ogsonofgroo
@Ogsonofgroo Год назад
As kids in the late '60s my brothers and me saw his pump-car movie (The Railrodder 1965) and I've been a fan ever since. As many others have mentioned he really was a pioneer on so many levels and that he never killed himself in any of his insane stunts is a miracle, I think the Gods that be must have smiled upon him. It is wonderful to see much of his material posted here on YT and its given me many hours of nail-biting entertainment, he truly was a master.
@delrey874
@delrey874 Год назад
Buster Keaton is the GOAT.
@jeanpaulboulet9050
@jeanpaulboulet9050 Год назад
Un sacré cascadeur, tout est calculé au millimètre prés, l'enchainement des scènes est vraiment spectaculaire et l'imagination omniprésente. Un acrobate et un artiste vraiment doué. Fabuleux Monsieur Buster Keaton's.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Il était génial en effet ! A part peut-être Jackie Chan on n'a jamais fait mieux en terme de cascades !
@lindildeev5721
@lindildeev5721 Год назад
@@misterwhyte Et Tom Cruise, alors ?
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
@@lindildeev5721 Certes, Tom Cruise aussi. Il manque quand même un petit charme dans ce que fait Tom Cruise je trouve, mais c'est peut-être parce que le recul manque par rapport aux deux autres.
@davidreid5672
@davidreid5672 Год назад
Absolutely superb, a pure genius!
@mrq6270
@mrq6270 Год назад
I don’t know why he’s not more famous. Everyone in my circle knows Chaplin, but no one had even heard of Keaton. But he was a true genius and really deserves to be known
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Agreed. I don't like Chaplin too much personally. I suspect he's more remembered because he had a style that was easily recognizable, rather than for his talents.
@edgarcox1611
@edgarcox1611 Год назад
Excellent compilation of Buster Keaton's comedic talents [despite his signature deadpan expression] as well as a sampling of some of the best [and most dangerous] stunts which Keaton performed himself in his films in the time before stunt doubles [or Jackie Chan]. My compliments on the musical selections for this video which perfectly complements the action. Not only did Buster perform all the dangerous stunts in his films, but he was also directed, produced, and wrote many of those films starting when he was only 25 [1920] as well as devising all the stunts himself. Aside from Chaplin, there has never been a creative filmmaker of this caliber-ever! Fun fact: six of Keaton's films are listed in the National Film Registry [as being of historical importance for preservation]. Buster, you were the best!
@donyoung7874
@donyoung7874 Год назад
Buster Keaton is my favorite silent era comedian. His technical inventiveness greatly expanded the possibilities of film making.
@GraphicRanchAnimation
@GraphicRanchAnimation 27 дней назад
That ladder stunt and that motorcycle stunt made me go 'HOLY SHIT', not gonna lie.
@sm6jesse
@sm6jesse Год назад
He is just unbelievable. what a gift!
@glauciafloresyreyes1833
@glauciafloresyreyes1833 2 месяца назад
Great . He was a genius !!!! Amazing and very very intelligent😂😂😂😂😂
@stiofandundealgan1280
@stiofandundealgan1280 Год назад
Awesome actor. With him, no stuntman needed ! Very intelligent and physical, this man is a precursor and a legend in the film industry !
@julianr.7186
@julianr.7186 Год назад
A guy out of this world!!
@lasiesta22
@lasiesta22 Год назад
El más gracioso, elegante, emocionante cine de todos los tiempos. Amamos a Buster! Hermosa selección y excelente la música😘
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Muchas gracias! 😄
@LivinOnBorrowedAngst
@LivinOnBorrowedAngst Год назад
Great supercut, great music choice. I'll be showing this to anyone who asks me about my favorite filmmaker
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Thank you so much! The choice of the music was the toughest part so I'm glad people like it!
@catmomjewett
@catmomjewett Год назад
My favorite! ❤️
@nobbykaiser8212
@nobbykaiser8212 4 месяца назад
Vielen Dank für diesen Beitrag - Buster ist und bleibt unschlagbar und verzieht dabei keine Miene 🎉
@sage4nowty129
@sage4nowty129 Месяц назад
Amazing stunts!! Awesome!!
@P-G-77
@P-G-77 Год назад
Hard old fantastic times.
@jacklee279
@jacklee279 Год назад
Buster Keaton was great! Keaton, and Charlie Chaplin, had a rivalry back then.
@j.tgrooms
@j.tgrooms Год назад
The man who invented stuntwork
@johnoakes7244
@johnoakes7244 3 месяца назад
Practically a superhero for real and a comedy genius
@gregstegeman7102
@gregstegeman7102 Год назад
No one even comes close. Not even Chaplin.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Agreed! It really saddens me that studios at the time didn't realize that and destroyed his career. One can only imagine the masterpieces we missed because of them!
@daveerickson9524
@daveerickson9524 Год назад
You got that right
@ExoticChild
@ExoticChild Год назад
@@misterwhyte what happened to him
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
@@ExoticChild Long story short: Buster Keaton had some issues with the studio executives. He often went over budget while filming (in The General especially) and that lead him to lose his creative freedom. Also, around the end of the 1920s, movies started to have sound and actors were now required to talk. For many actors of the silent era, the transition was difficult. Studio executives didn't think he was good enough to be a leading man in talking films so they kind of buried him. Also, in his private life he had to deal with two consecutive failed marriages, which lead him to depression and alcoholism. Eventually he more or less left the movie industry, became mostly sober and luckily his third marriage was a success. He never directed another movie after all that, he only just appeared in small roles in other people's films.
@ExoticChild
@ExoticChild Год назад
@@misterwhyte So sad of him. There are many unknown legends still today
@rexbrumbelow1550
@rexbrumbelow1550 Год назад
Amazing
@miranisilva532
@miranisilva532 10 месяцев назад
A incrível genialidade de Buster Keaton!♥️
@Antigegner
@Antigegner Год назад
Amazing ! 0:51 - When he holds on to the car driving by....that's quite a speed to hold on to with only one arm...I wonder whether or not he was injured.
@billstout2118
@billstout2118 Год назад
I heard that he did get injured doing that stunt, but don't know if that is fact.
@ernestcline2868
@ernestcline2868 Год назад
I would hope that scene was shot slower and speeded up for comedic effect. One advantage of silent movies is that since there is no sound to sync, it's easier to do camera speed tricks.
@heliopyre
@heliopyre Год назад
kicking his feet up helps make it look faster.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
​@@ernestcline2868 It was indeed filmed a bit slower than what's shown in the final film but it's still an incredibly physically challenging and dangerous stunt. Not many people would be crazy enough to do it!
@krispinkrisperson3614
@krispinkrisperson3614 Год назад
Thanks
@musab5khalaf
@musab5khalaf Год назад
its like watching Jacki Chan in black and white. wow, seriously WOW, this guy is unreal, I have no other description.
@mrq6270
@mrq6270 Год назад
Jackie Chan named Keaton as one of his biggest influences.
@user-qe7ew5iq5e
@user-qe7ew5iq5e 8 месяцев назад
Buster Keaton ist wundervoll, ...-very very good....I love it ...:)
@melissacooper8724
@melissacooper8724 Год назад
Buster Keaton is amazing!
@cartoonbinge
@cartoonbinge Год назад
Great Supercut :)
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Thank you so much! A Méliès supercut is up next. ;)
@cartoonbinge
@cartoonbinge Год назад
@@misterwhyte Oh cool :)
@Sunfleuria
@Sunfleuria Год назад
Thank you!
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
You're welcome! :)
@touchofgrey5372
@touchofgrey5372 Год назад
He was NOT a clown! Those you find in a circus. He was a "director, a comedian and stuntman and a very funny and talented actor!
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Orson Welles uses the word clown in the sense that he was someone who dedicated his life to make people laugh. Also, Buster Keaton came from a vaudeville family, started his career on the stage and he kept on doing so his entire life. Vaudeville often included clown acts similar to what his family was doing. So I believe Welles is correct, he was the greatest clown in the History of cinema. I also agree with you though that he was so much more than just a funny clown! :)
@touchofgrey5372
@touchofgrey5372 Год назад
@@misterwhyte Well, yes; there are definitions and there are definitions. Anyway, he was a great actor. He would have been even more famous and successful had it not been for Chaplin grabbing a big part of the motion picture industry. The timing was bad. Cheers
@kompott5844
@kompott5844 Год назад
Sensational!! Some of these stunts are unique and unparalleled...
@jazzmusician46
@jazzmusician46 Год назад
Bloody hell! Simply amazing! 😳
@kabirahmed8465
@kabirahmed8465 Год назад
Great legend superb Action scenes at that time great star
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Yes, he really was the best!
@DMETS519
@DMETS519 Год назад
That one scene with him just sitting on the side of the train, on the big link that connects the wheels on the locomotive. Looks pretty calm and simple right? That one stunt was all on the train engineer. Buster just had to trust him. If the engineer gives it just a little too much power those big wheels spin and that link would tear Buster apart. Before they shot the scene the engineer told Buster he could do it, no problem.
@mikegike7273
@mikegike7273 Год назад
He started the path to a new way of action movies. Pure brilliance for the era.
@user-ec8kf5qc5o
@user-ec8kf5qc5o Год назад
Всегда есть место на земле гению чего то, что ставит его выше других людей, вся гениальность в упорном труде, а это дорогого стоит
@vijayvijay4123
@vijayvijay4123 Год назад
போடா மொக்கை
@totointernational3493
@totointernational3493 Год назад
Buster Keaton is with Charles Chaplin and Jacky Chan one of the best funny actors of the world... 😉
@justinmanser7525
@justinmanser7525 Год назад
Awe inspiring even if today's youth are dare devil's with climbing ect. He was doing it for a huge amount of different people from different backgrounds in the name of laughter. Truly the greatest conceptual stunt coordinator ever, and responsible for so much of modern film makers inspirations are grounded in his work. Impeccable dude!
@SteveSingsThings
@SteveSingsThings Год назад
Only Jackie Chan comes to mind as being comparable. Apparently Jackie was a big fan of Buster’s work. No surprise there. 😊
@richardprofit6363
@richardprofit6363 Год назад
my first thought was "I wonder if Jackie Chan watched this guy?"
@weesky5222
@weesky5222 Год назад
so well done it's amazing...
@cil2698
@cil2698 Год назад
Génial, j'adore !!!! 🥰🤩
@DOI_ARTS
@DOI_ARTS Год назад
Jackie Chan idolizes this guy
@juancarlosvasquezurena5999
@juancarlosvasquezurena5999 Год назад
Sorprendentemente genial.
@joedaodragon3565
@joedaodragon3565 Год назад
AWESOME!!!
@mauricioszwerdszarf1455
@mauricioszwerdszarf1455 Год назад
The best of the best!
@marcdelente2456
@marcdelente2456 Год назад
Buster keaton un génie absolut sans égale avec stan et ollie qui l admirait et C était réciproque.
@Imagi77
@Imagi77 Год назад
The ultimate mad lad.
@Expectadorable
@Expectadorable Год назад
Gracias. Lo comparto.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Muchas gracias!
@bestaghenbertkeushtad7201
@bestaghenbertkeushtad7201 Год назад
A ce jour Buster est toujours le meilleur de tous les temps.
@gerardmcquade5974
@gerardmcquade5974 Год назад
Utter genius
@Collection_Obsession
@Collection_Obsession Год назад
Lucille Ball said once in an interview that Buster Keaton gave her alot of tips regarding physical comedy.
@justicewokeisutterbs8641
@justicewokeisutterbs8641 Год назад
He is the GOAT.
@zejaguar
@zejaguar Год назад
Definitely a film making pioneer. Hilarious.
@foofooblenda734
@foofooblenda734 Год назад
an epic inventor of comedy
@AZCracker
@AZCracker Год назад
Amazing talent
@johnadubato7247
@johnadubato7247 Год назад
He was amazing !
@dubdub6638
@dubdub6638 Год назад
Great!!!
@antoniofernandolendini1778
@antoniofernandolendini1778 Год назад
Muito bom!!!
@owenmanuela6949
@owenmanuela6949 Год назад
I think Jackie Chan was inspired by some of Buster's stunts
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Yes he was, he paid hommage to him in several movies. :)
@gregwaters7830
@gregwaters7830 Год назад
I see Buster Keaton's genius sometimes in Johnny Depp's antics in Pirates of the Caribbean series
@cfb1199
@cfb1199 Год назад
The father of parkour
@sharpshooter33
@sharpshooter33 Год назад
How have they not made a movie about him yet?
@RingLordSonic
@RingLordSonic Год назад
Jackie chain’s inspiration
@HikeColorado
@HikeColorado Год назад
Buster was amazing 👍
@peterscharf6429
@peterscharf6429 Год назад
James Mason, famous actor whonhas bought Keatons House found in a wardrobe old film roles. Mason has the credit, that we know Keaton now. Keston was long time forgotten. A lot of his short movies are lost
@sujith.ssujith.s4260
@sujith.ssujith.s4260 Год назад
Special effect.1900...old is cool..new is foooll...2000
@maharajaudiolabs7866
@maharajaudiolabs7866 Год назад
Very good athlete too.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Totally!
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan Год назад
Also worth mentioning...in Steamboat Bill, Jr., he performed his most famous and unforgettable stunt. A building facade weighing two tons crashed to the ground, narrowly missing Keaton. The open window in the attic is what saves him from being crushed. The mark he had to hit was a nail in the ground. If you look closely, you can see a man on the left pushing and quickly running out of view. The greatest sight gag ever!
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Where's the man exactly? I watched it several times in a row and I don't see him... ☹
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan Год назад
@@misterwhyte I understand, misterwhyte. I never saw him either until it was pointed out in a 1962 compilation of Buster's best stunts. The man can be seen very briefly in the ground floor left window. He's wearing a white shirt. He runs like a bat out of hell so he wouldn't be seen.
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
@@jamesdrynan Hmmm are you sure? Even looking at it frame by frame on my editing software, I can't see a man behind the windows. The blinds are white and they're moving, I believe that's what you're taking for a man. I could be wrong of course, but I doubt someone could move out of view fast enough if they were behind the wall.
@heliopyre
@heliopyre Год назад
what makes it better than the homages that have done the same gag since is that he's facing away from it. all the other ones I've seen have them facing toward the falling wall.
@MrBrutal33
@MrBrutal33 Год назад
Genius
@josebasterrica3358
@josebasterrica3358 Год назад
Un genio absoluto .El y Chaplin lo mejor del cine
@dickface9157
@dickface9157 4 месяца назад
Incredible.
@novaguy509
@novaguy509 Год назад
A genius.
@charlesnye1736
@charlesnye1736 Год назад
Greatest stuntman in history.
@overdriver9173
@overdriver9173 Год назад
...the Great Buster.
@johnzeszut3170
@johnzeszut3170 Год назад
Buster hit the skids for a while and yet somehow rebounded to appear in movies and t.v. (Twilight Zone). The guy had what ever it took......
@dulanbango5050
@dulanbango5050 Год назад
💯💯💯
@familyplans3788
@familyplans3788 Год назад
definately have to give a shout out to the set designers as well!! its one thing to do the stunt but to make the set so that the genius of Buster to shine is another!! No CGI remember , just clever camera work and amazing sets to compliment his genius
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Totally agree! Filmmaking is a collaborative effort.
@familyplans3788
@familyplans3788 Год назад
@@misterwhyte i tried to post it without taking away the talent that Buster had , but i do feel that youngsters today , with the advent of go-pros, dont appreciate the size of the cameras that were used then lol
@SoCoolScience
@SoCoolScience Год назад
Jackie Chan of his day comedic stunt work
@caroltenge5147
@caroltenge5147 Год назад
music makes you nuts,
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
In a good way or a bad one? 😂
@jagmarc
@jagmarc Год назад
Set RU-vid playback speed to 0.5 x to view at the speed the stunt was filmed
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
Not all but some of them were filmed in slow motion, that's true. It's quite interesting to watch. :)
@jagmarc
@jagmarc Год назад
@@misterwhyte seems many of the sequences were shot at 12 f.p.s. Maybe 100 years ago film stock was considered too expensive a higher fps, perhaps it took a few takes to capture the stunt
@misterwhyte
@misterwhyte Год назад
@@jagmarc Around that time most films were made with film of either 16 or 24fps, so it was close enough to what we're used to. The reason some scenes were filmed in slowmo was for safety reasons, so it was mostly for dangerous stunts. They'd have trains and cars going really slowly for example. You can spot which scenes were filmed slower by the movements of the actors that are unnaturally fast (like in the scene where he catches the car as it passes in front of him for example).
@lesafowers8142
@lesafowers8142 Год назад
Without Buster Keaton and Greta Garbo in my life, it would feel strange to me. If I could just go back and live at that time I would time travel to do just that. If only. 🖤🖤🖤
@entidadalan4967
@entidadalan4967 Год назад
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