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  • Anyone interested in silent clown Harry Langdon should take a look at this unusual two-reel short. Lucky Stars is definitely not the funniest movie Langdon ever made—in fact, it's hardly a comedy at all in the conventional sense—but it is an intriguing, memorable film that serves as an ideal showcase for Harry's child-like screen persona while providing a colorful role for Vernon Dent, Langdon's frequent screen cohort. Buffs interested in the career of Frank Capra will also want to catch this one, for he co-authored the story, and you don't have to be an "auteurist" to detect familiar themes Capra the director would go on to explore in greater depth in his classics of the '30s.

    The version of Lucky Star restored for DVD release in 2007 opens with an eerie theme by a band called the Snark Ensemble, one that suggests we're about to see a some kind of mystery or even a ghost story, and as the film rolls along the music comes to feel oddly appropriate. In the prologue our leading man Harry Lamb is introduced gazing skyward, while an astronomer peers through an enormous telescope and predicts his future. "Follow that star and you'll win fame and fortune," asserts the soothsayer, adding that the star indicates he'll be a doctor, and he will take a long journey and fall in love with a dark woman. Naturally Harry swallows all this as the gospel truth, and sets out to follow his star of destiny. Perhaps we're meant to accept the astronomer's prophecy as valid, but whether he's a charlatan or a genuine prophet remains unknown, because our hapless hero promptly boards the wrong train and heads off in the wrong direction. The unfortunate events that befall Harry ever after his fateful mistake can be regarded as cosmic punishment, and a warning to the viewer, i.e.: when a soothsayer gives you instructions follow them to the letter, or THIS may happen to you! No wonder the music sounds so ominous.

    On the train Harry meets Hiram Healy, an old-fashioned medicine show con man. Healy is played by Vernon Dent, dressed in the Barnum-like costume of a 19th century huckster, recognizable as such to anyone—except Harry, of course. In hopes of being trained to become a great doctor, gullible Harry hands over his entire bankroll to the quack. "I can teach you all I know in a very short time," promises Healy, and we believe him. After a lapse of time the duo arrive in a Latin American village called San Tabasco, presumably south of the border in Mexico. (It's certainly not in the Southwestern U.S., because wherever this is, Prohibition is not in effect. Saloons are open and beer flows freely in San Tabasco.) The entrepreneurs set up their platform in the public square and promise the residents a medicine show: Healy delivers the spiel while Harry strums a "Hawaiian banjo." Here's where it becomes clear that Lucky Stars is not going to unfold like a routine comedy short; that is, this is where Langdon and his collaborators defy our expectations. For starters, and despite its funny name, San Tabasco is depicted in a surprisingly straightforward, non-comic fashion. As soon as we see the stucco buildings and men wearing sombreros we expect typical silent comedy gags, i.e. bits involving corrupt officials, stubborn burros, and perennial siestas, etc., but there's very little of that sort of thing. We also notice that the film's production values are far beyond the normal range of a two-reel comedy: San Tabasco looks like a real village. Most of these scenes take place at night, and the cinematography is notably stylish and atmospheric. When Healy begins his spiel and the curious crowd gathers, we sense that something bad is going to happen, and the mood turns genuinely suspenseful. Soon Harry encounters a dark woman and assumes the prophecy is coming true, but he couldn't be more wrong. She's the daughter of a local druggist, furious that these medicine show quacks are hurting her father's business, and willing to do whatever it takes to foil them, even if that means murdering Harry. I won't give away the ending, but on first viewing I found it abrupt, perhaps because it seemed there was plentiful material here for a longer story. Lucky Stars is a two-reel comedy that looks like a feature film, and I wish it had become one.

    I first saw this short at NYC's Film Forum in the early 1990s, when it was shown as a curtain-raiser at a festival devoted to the work of Frank Capra. It fit the bill nicely. Capra wrote the story in collaboration with Arthur Ripley, and the director in this case was Langdon's longtime colleague Harry Edwards, but Lucky Stars still feels like an embryonic Capra movie, perhaps because the Harry Lamb we meet here is a prototype for Capra's later Everyman heroes, such as Mr. Deeds and Mr. Smith. Harry is far too other-worldly to be an "Everyman," but Deeds and Smith resemble him in that they're also innocents who leave their hometowns and venture out into a dangerous world full of crooks, con artists, and other predators, and are very nearly defeated. Mr. Deeds and Mr. Smith triumph over the phonies and crooks in the end, while Harry just barely survives his misadventures and doesn't ultimately triumph, apparently because he followed the wrong star. This offbeat premise may not satisfy all tastes, and newcomers to Langdon may want to seek out some of his more conventional comedies before seeing this one, but for viewers open to off-beat silent comedy Lucky Stars remains a unique experience, a special short that's unlike anything else made by Langdon or any of his contemporaries.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is a Harry Langdon short film made for Mack Sennett and is included with the "Harry Langdon: Lost and Found" four DVD set.

    In this very odd film, Harry is seen initially consulting with an astrologer who tells him to go out and seek his fortune. Harry takes his money and sets out for medical school, but somehow falls into the clutches of a quack who sells useless patent medicines. Harry believes in this guy and his miracle cure and helps him hawk this rubbish. Later, when the daughter of the town's pharmacist gets angry about her father losing business, she gets a male friend to sabotage the quack's supply and the medicine begins exploding--leading to a very slapstick ending that bears little similarity to the later more story oriented Langdon films. And, looking for cheap laughs, the film fails to elicit good laughs and is a step backwards for Harry in his career.
  • hte-trasme2 December 2009
    This is a great short comedy from the time when Harry Langdon has been fully established as a screen presence, had found an environment where his style of comedy could really flourish, and had not yet moved into features from his series of two-reel comedies for Mack Sennett. "Lucky Stars" could almost be said to be half a funny comedy and half a really nice little twenty-minute character study.

    The focus here is the Langdon character as a trusting innocent. He believes implicitly in the prediction of a probably charlatan fortune teller who tells him to follow his destiny of becoming a doctor. He lost-little-boy persona likes and believes in everyone he meets after that, and there's something haunting and unforgettable in the comedy of this film as the helpless little man is continually put upon by the rampant untrustworthiness of that we the audience can see around Harry. Comedy comes from the fact that we are forced to realize that, because we do know what is really going on, we are not as innocent as Harry, even though somewhere inside we all feel as if we are.

    After a shocking and funny episode in which Harry simply does not realize that if you have gotten on the wrong train you do not rectify the situation by jumping off it, he becomes a "doctor" by having his money stolen by and becoming the lackey of a shifty snake oil sales man -- total trust has made him believe in a man who unwittingly makes him a crook. They wind up in a surprisingly grimly realistic Wild West town, and of course, further comic complications arise. Harry's comic timing on film is perfect by now, a joy to behold. He's constantly turning moments that would have flown by unnoticed in other people's films into memorable comic bits (look at his face after the conductor tells him he got on the wrong train -- he keeps chatting amiably for a moment before he face falls and becomes a picture of terror). See also a wonderful digression in which Harry cannot be distracted from a glass of beer that he is hugely excited about have acquired in a saloon.

    Harry Langdon himself got his show business start performing in real-life medicine shows, so it's possible some autobiographical elements helped inspire this film. It's like a microcosm of the Langdon comedy world; perhaps the moment that encapsulates it is when Harry goes blissfully to sleep on the shoulder of the beautiful Natalie Kingston -- as she stealthily pulls out a knife with which to attack him. The vestige of a trademark Mack Sennett chase scene at the end is so much an afterthought that instead of distracting from the proceedings it becomes merely one more funny sight gag.

    This is a very funny -- and also somehow resonant and a little poignant -- short that's a great example of Langdon's work.