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  • My experience with this Harry Langdon short demonstrates a couple of notable points about silent comedy. First, it really helps to see a good print of a film, and second, even more importantly, it helps enormously to see these movies the way they were meant to be seen: in a theater, with an appreciative audience, accompanied by live music. Of course it isn't always possible to meet either one of these criteria, but when both are met you may find that a movie which otherwise seemed to be routine or even a bit flat can suddenly come to life before your eyes.

    Case in point: I first saw His Marriage Wow years ago at home on TV, in the form of a second-rate video copy. The picture quality was poor, and the print used for the transfer lacked the original Sennett title cards. The cards in that VHS version were added later and, as I would subsequently discover, did not follow the intended wording. Consequently, the plot was confusing and the gags lacked punch. Harry performed some amusing routines and Vernon Dent was strikingly weird in his character role, but in the end I concluded that this comedy was something of a quirky misfire. Recently however, I was fortunate enough to see it again, happily with an audience, as a lead-in to Buster Keaton's great feature Seven Chances, and this time the Langdon short was a revelation. The print was crisp and clear, the original titles cards were intact, and the crowd loved it. I felt like I was seeing this movie for the first time.

    In the opening sequence it is Harry's wedding day, and his fiancé Agnes and the wedding party await his arrival with growing concern while he sits calmly in the front pew—at the wrong church. (The location used for this sequence is the very same one Keaton used a year later in Seven Chances, as we observed at the screening.) Once he realizes his mistake, Harry tries to race to the right place, but manages to delay himself repeatedly. This leads to a great routine where he loses the wedding ring and has to ride on the trunk of a moving car, using a pen-knife to extricate it from the car's spinning tire. Eventually Harry arrives at the church, and here's where we meet Vernon Dent, who gives an unforgettable performance as Professor McGlumm, "student of melancholia and pessimism." He looks like something out of a German Expressionist nightmare, dark-eyed and eerie. Just to be helpful (not!) McGlumm plants the idea within the bridal party that Harry has met with some sort of dreadful accident, and then, after Harry shows up, he suggests privately to the nervous groom that Agnes may be marrying him only for his insurance, which she'll collect after bumping him off. Harry's anxiety turns the ceremony into a prolonged series of fumbles, attempted escapes and miscues. Throughout, Professor McGlumm sits in the front pew and glares at the befuddled couple with laser-beam intensity. When I saw this with an audience each close-up of McGlumm got a bigger laugh as the scene rolled along.

    After that great first reel the mid-section focusing on Harry and Agnes' life at home meanders somewhat, but His Marriage Wow picks up again and concludes with a rousing finale, as McGlumm treats Harry to a high speed (and beautifully filmed) auto race through town. The highlight comes when the professor abandons the front seat entirely, forcing Harry to take the wheel, at which point McGlumm literally removes the steering wheel and flings it out of the car! The chase finale isn't well motivated, nor do we ever learn exactly why the professor is hanging out with Agnes' family in the first place, but why quibble? This short comedy is a real laugh-provoker that features a number of good gags and a great performance by Vernon Dent, who practically steals the show from the nominal star.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    My bet is that a lot of the Harry Langdon fans out there dislike this film. Instead of the usual sweet-natured and deliberately paced film they are used to seeing from him, this film is extremely silly and very difficult to believe. As for me, I preferred this film--and I loved the stupid and over-the-top performance of Prof. Looney McGlumm! The film begins with Harry on his wedding day. It seems he's gone to the wrong church and so once he realizes it he speeds to the other one--just in time to marry his lady love. Harry looks forward to wedded bliss. That is,...until he talks with one of the guests, Prof. Looney McGlumm. McGlumm convinces him that MAYBE his wife is only interested in the insurance policy on Harry and plans on doing away with him! So, instead of just saying "I do" and getting married, Harry tries to escape repeatedly but each time just ends up where he started.

    Despite all this, they are married and the next scene finds them in their new home. Harry is still worried and thinks she is trying to poison him. In fact, once he drinks his coffee, he thinks he's dying and house guest McGlumm tells him he must rush with him to the hospital before it is too late! At this point, the audience learns that McGlumm is an escaped mental patient and his character gets REALLY, REALLY silly. McGlumm insists on driving and is a total maniac. At one point, just for laughs, he yanks the steering wheel off the car as they are racing through traffic! Sure it's silly and the humor is very broad, but the car sequence is actually well-done and looks much more real than many contemporary chase scenes--and far more realistic than the car scenes in most Laurel and Hardy films (with the lousy rear projection).

    Funny, stupid and inventive. This film will make just about anyone laugh unless they are dead.
  • hte-trasme10 October 2009
    10/10
    Wow
    I'm going to have to disagree with a previous IMDb commentator on this one: I think Harry Langdon fans WILL enjoy this two-reel comedy from his days at the Mack Sennett studio, and they will enjoy it very much. Its kooky and bizarre elements are worked into a short that is fast-paced with constant laughs and a chase at the end -- and still a perfect showcase for Langdon's still, quiet humor. All the gags here flow perfectly from their own upside-down logic, both in terms of the short itself and the characters' reasons for acting. So it seems perfectly natural that Harry should be clutching the side of a car as it drives down the street stabbing the wheel with a pen-knife -- and that's hysterical. It's in parts like this that you can really see the influence he is said to have had on Stan Laurel -- especially in his apologetic little pat of the tire.

    Harry's comedy performance here is wonderful, and Harry Edwards collaborates with him brilliantly by this point -- using nothing more than his subtle facial expressions and bodily twitches to get gags like Harry's cold-feet solicitation of objections at his wedding or his desire to get back the money he donated at the wrong church.

    Professor McGlumm, played totally straight and therefor even funnier by Vernon Dent -- is an amazing creation on his own which plays perfectly with Harry's character, who in his innocent always buys his depressing pronouncements, then slowly starts to doubt the wisdom of trusting him as he wildly swings the car through the road and almost kills him several times.

    This might not play up the isolation, vulnerability, or pathos of the Langdon character the way some of his other films do, but it's as funny, well-played, well-paced, and well-written as just about anything I've seen -- and perfectly suited to the star comedian's strengths too. That said, I am willing to bet that this would play well even to viewers who don't otherwise like Harry Langdon. That said -- I recommend this to everybody!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    "His Marriage Wow" is a 20-minute live action short film from 1925, so this one is already 90 years old and it is a black-and-white silent film of course. If you check out the names Edwards, Ripley and Giebler, you will see that they were very successful and prolific back in the day, but now they are pretty much forgotten. But films like this one here bring them the attention back for a moment or two. Giebler also worked on many Three Stooges projects way after this one here. The lead actor is Harry Langdon and he fits in right after the big names from the silent era, so he is in Tier II if you want to say so, but also fairly forgotten nowadays. Vernon Dent, however, is still somewhat known, not necessarily because of this one here, but for some other projects in which he played the bad guy.

    As for this film here, I kinda like title and also that it is finally a silent short film that has enough intertitles to understand what is going on. But Langdon did not convince me entirely and I also think it could have been shorter like the poisoning suspicion scenes are simply way too long. And the car (almost) action scene near the end did not impress me either. Maybe 12-14 minutes would have sufficed. All in all, I would not say this was a memorable film really, but it also wasn't a failure, so if you really love the silent film era, feel free to check it out. Everybody else can skip it and they won't be missing too much.
  • His Marriage Wow (1925)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    Harry Langdon plays a man about to be married but he gets off on the wrong foot by going to the wrong church. He finally arrives at the right place but Professor McGlumm scares him by asking why such a beautiful woman would want to marry him. Of course, McGlumm says it's because she's going to kill him for the insurance money, which makes Langdon a nervous boy. HIS MARRIAGE WOW is a "wow" in terms of comedy but I thought it was a fairly interesting movie made worth viewing because you really get to see a different type of Langdon. As other reviewers have said, this here isn't the typical type of role that you'd see Langdon doing but I actually thought he did a pretty good job. I really liked the nervous look that was constantly on his face and especially during a dinner sequence where McGlumm makes him think that he's drank some poison. Another funny sequence happens at the end as the two are driving around but I won't spoil what happens or the twist that happened in the story (which actually works well). Langdon offers up a fine performance but I think it's Vernon Dent who really steals the picture as McGlumm.