I can’t decide which is more fun: Buster, or the reactions of these gentlemen who don’t miss a beat, and have all the wonder of a child. Really attests to the timeless and international appeal of the silent comedians like Buster, Chaplin, and Laurel and Hardy, to name a few of the best.
Buster Keaton did all his own stunts, too. No stunt double for him. You made a perfect choice! I'm sore from laughing along with Badshah. 😄 I love watching them enjoy it. Lots more silent movies out there, if you want to show one occasionally. Comedy was very big in those days, because it's easy to get laughs without words, so there are quite a few to pick from. Shabash to all!
He only did his own stunts before he signed with MGM in the early 1930s, they wouldn't allow him to do them because he was part of the Actor's Guild. He got paid $700 for one stunt, sliding down a flight of stairs on his butt [edit - he never cashed the cheque]. Prior to MGM he allowed an Olympic pole vaulter to do the scene of vaulting through a window in College.
😂❤ I LOVE YOU GUYS SO MUCH! And it's so heart warming to see our Badshah laughing & smiling. Thank you Babu Bhai for sharing him with us. What a wonderful & addition to this channel.
If Buster Keaton were alive today to see this reaction, I think he would of considered all of his efforts 100% worthwhile. This is completely adorable. This is the reason Buster Keaton made these movies. So fucking cute. BRAVO!!!! How do you say perfection?! Because this is perfection incarnate.
What a treat - I've never seen this one before. Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton are two of my favorite silent comedians - these are great little movies, and they really do seem to transcend language barriers - the villagers caught on pretty quickly for all but the most obscure American customs and references of the time and place!
So glad you 2 gentlemen enjoyed this silent movie. It was quite funny! Some situations, like marriage, are universal no matter if it is in America or in India or Pakistan.😅😅😅😂😂😂👌👌
This is the beauty of silent films: they are universally understood with little to no translation needed. If you would like to do a longer Keaton film, I would recommend 'The General', which is my personal favorite. It is set during the American Civil War, and based on a true incident. While the original incident was tragic, Keaton built a very funny movie around it. I've watched your reaction to 'Coco', and I'm glad you enjoyed it so much. I think you would like 'Encanto' as well. I just came across this channel by accident today. I wish I'd known about it sooner.
Buster Keaton invented the idea of movie stunts. Literally nobody did it before as they believed it dangerous which it kinda was but buster did it safely.
Buster was doing stunts since he was a toddler, he was part of a comedy act and his father would literally toss him around the stage, even into the crowd. His wee little outfit even had handles sewn onto the back to make it easier for his pop to throw him.
btw what you see is what you get, buster keaton is actually taking the pain, a brilliant stuntsman Harold Lloyd is another master performer, hardout comedys with do or die consequences
The man who played Buster’s father was his father in real life! When Buster was little he and his parents did a comedy act on stage and later his dad was in some of his movies. All of Buster’s movies are incredible but I think the guys will especially enjoy The Scarecrow, One Week, Sherlock Jr., or The Boat. I Loved watching their joyous reactions! ❤
Buster Keaton's real father Joe plays his father in this. They had a very rough (so rough they were accused of child abuse) slapstick comedy show before Buster started making movies. Joe would throw Buster through scenery, and once threw him at a heckler in the audience!
after the chaplin one i was thinking they should watch a buster keaton movie. its like you read my mind haha. and the great thing about those movies is there is no copyright :P
The reactions from these guys is priceless.. I will watch several of these just to watch one of these guys say "...lest he or she does this or that funny or dangerous thing . It is hilarious to watch these characters try and decide for themselves what is going on when you can read the subtitles and they can't. Really funny,... and I like the tall guy... he is awesome..
"I bought a Ford" That was funny at the time, a common joke anyone with an injury would say to get a laugh. Model T Fords used mechanical hand brakes, they worked like the brakes on a bicycle and could be locked when the car was parked and a transmission (Drum rather than Disc) brake, it is neither powerful enough to work effectively and may even be damaged by trying to stop a moving vehicle, and those were only on the rear wheels. They were forced to either hit someone else or veer off into a pole or something because the handbrake required taking a hand off the wheel, they didn't have lanes or lights, no Yield or right of way, everyone for themselves, it was fun to watch, anywho, Fords didn't get 4 wheel braking systems until 1927 and wouldn't adapt hydraulic brakes fully until 1949 and then only for their trucks. Long story short "I bought a Ford" is hilarious if you get the context.
@@mycatz2fatgaming Well, Ford was the last of the Big 3 US manufacturers to switch to electric starters after 1920 and the movie was made in 1920, you're reasoning is valid. They also had the worst braking system with the drum brakes constantly breaking, no pun intended. Fords were the cheapest to buy & they were the cheapest to build, that's why they sold so many.
The filmmaker J.M.Schenck was born to a Jewish family in Rybinsk, Yaroslavl Oblast, Russian Empire. He emigrated to New York City on July 19, 1892 under the name Ossip Schenker. Around the time the movie was being shot, the Dearborn Independent was publishing a series of articles very critical of the the Jews. My guess is that scene was a swipe at Henry Ford.
@@ll7868 and @mycatz2fat - thank you both very much for the context! My guess was the hand-crank, my family actually still owned a couple of those old cranks, had them hanging on a barn wall for years, but I don't know what happened to them after we moved. Looking at all the characters involved, I'm going to guess they couldn't afford a Ford between them - they're all meant to be dirt poor, as hinted at by the 5-and-dime ring and the suit that doesn't fit! - which maybe adds yet another layer of humor to the remark. A great deal of the humor of these sorts of movies from Charles Chaplain, Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd, the Stooges, Laurel and Hardy, the Bowery Boys, and other Vaudeville-era comedians revolves around the poverty of these characters, which I guess was pretty relatable for audiences through the Depression years especially, though I'm sure the Vaudevillians were no strangers to poverty themselves! A lot of the stories see these characters "pulling themselves up by the bootstraps" to "make good", trying to marry girls who are just a bit out of their league, trying to pass themselves off as being richer than they are, trying to dodge hotel bills, running scams or cheating at dice or other petty crimes to make ends meet, using invention and creativity to live a comfortable lifestyle with almost no money or property to work with (such as making a little food go a long way, like one short where Charlie Chaplain cooks one of his boots into a steak), trying to do something they can't afford cheaply and getting cheated (there's one great little short where Harold Lloyd, I believe, tries to build a house from a bargain-basement kit and puts the whole thing together totally wrong with hilarious results!), getting hired by rich people to do work and tearing the mansion down through sheer incompetence, and that sort of thing. Those poor characters are constantly being harassed by the police, where richer characters would be afforded more deference from judges and the law! A lot of the humor would revolve around just how vague the boundaries between economic classes could be in America, and how virtuous, inventive, ambitious, and hard working characters could work around the limits of their poverty and ascend to a higher class almost over night: this "American Dream" idea was built into the spirit of those times in America, both as a fantasy, and often as a reality in ways that might seem a little strange today! In other cases, the humor plays on the poor "taking the piss" out of wealthy characters and "bringing them down a few pegs" toward the level of the common man. As an American, I take it all in stride without thinking about it much until I notice how times have changed, and I wonder how much of that aspect of the movies translates to other cultures, where the class system might be a little more rigid or unforgiving?
@@pietrayday9915 Mr. Bean reminds me of all those characters. He was like all these guys from the silent era too, not speaking was part of his charm, his body language and facial expressions said everything. Rowan Atkinson would have been huge in that era.
Buster is my favourite of The Big 3, Chaplin, Keaton and Harold Lloyd. There are behind the scenes videos explaining how they did their stunts and built the sets to look like they were real like the famous waterfall scene, everyone knew the woman was a dummy but the waterfall itself was built on a set, the clock Harold hung from in Safety Last! was also fake. The clock Jackie Chan hung from in Project A was very real as was the fall and nearly unaliving himself.
Can someone explain Badshah's situation or past or pain ? He has been referred to as perhaps a victim of terrible things. He seems like a very kind man.
Do you have any idea how much that Babe Ruth baseball would go for at an auction if it was real? Buster was a massive baseball fan, Babe Ruth was his favourite player, it could have been real. Segue time. "The Babe" appeared in a cameo in Harold Lloyd’s final silent comedy Speedy (1928) as himself, the scene was shot at the orphanage where George Herman "Babe" Ruth grew up. That should be their next reaction, then you'll have all Big 3 Actors from the Silent Era, Keaton, Chaplin and Lloyd. Sidenote: John Goodman did a great job playing him in the biopic The Babe (1992).
@@tigristhelynx7224 Speedy has more significance, it was Lloyd's last silent film and it has Babe Ruth in it. The Clock scene can be watched in a highlight reel, better yet just the clock scene and the behind the scenes how it was done would be a good reaction. If Jackie Chan knew it was a fake clock tower he might not have attempted to copy the stunt for real.
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We can thank Buster for jackie chan movies! he said him self, he was his idol. and burt renolds for the cuts that they failed on showing after every movie! ☝️😇👍
I can’t decide which is more fun: Buster, or the reactions of these gentlemen who don’t miss a beat, and have all the wonder of a child. Really attests to the timeless and international appeal of the silent comedians like Buster, Chaplin, and Laurel and Hardy, to name a few of the best.
Buster Keaton did all his own stunts, too. No stunt double for him. You made a perfect choice! I'm sore from laughing along with Badshah. 😄 I love watching them enjoy it. Lots more silent movies out there, if you want to show one occasionally. Comedy was very big in those days, because it's easy to get laughs without words, so there are quite a few to pick from. Shabash to all!
He only did his own stunts before he signed with MGM in the early 1930s, they wouldn't allow him to do them because he was part of the Actor's Guild. He got paid $700 for one stunt, sliding down a flight of stairs on his butt [edit - he never cashed the cheque]. Prior to MGM he allowed an Olympic pole vaulter to do the scene of vaulting through a window in College.
Love these guys. They are so pure at heart.
Badshah's laughter is so contagious! He loves these old silent movies! Please get him some to watch at home.
I bet he would love Mr. Bean too!
No, but we'll sell him some.
😂❤ I LOVE YOU GUYS SO MUCH! And it's so heart warming to see our Badshah laughing & smiling. Thank you Babu Bhai for sharing him with us. What a wonderful & addition to this channel.
Badshah's laughter alone is worth watching this video! Great choice and great reactions.
How pleased Buster Keaton would be to see this adorable reaction.
If Buster Keaton were alive today to see this reaction, I think he would of considered all of his efforts 100% worthwhile. This is completely adorable. This is the reason Buster Keaton made these movies. So fucking cute. BRAVO!!!! How do you say perfection?! Because this is perfection incarnate.
Buster Keaton is one of my all time favorites. along with WC Fields.
"Just don't behead him" 😂 That should be the tag line for every Buster Keaton film ever.
Greetings from France, you 2 guys are kind hearted and lovely truthful people, may you have a long happy life
I always loved these buster Keaton movies. They are hilarious and anyone can understand that is happening. A masterpiece of the of silent film era.
I took care of my grandpa at the end of his life and I got a collection of Buster Keaton films to watch with him, the comedy is timeless.
What a treat - I've never seen this one before. Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton are two of my favorite silent comedians - these are great little movies, and they really do seem to transcend language barriers - the villagers caught on pretty quickly for all but the most obscure American customs and references of the time and place!
Badshah, his reaction, I feel this must be how people in the 1920s reacted.
Thank you gentlemen for sharing this movie with me! You made it brand new! ❤️
So glad you 2 gentlemen enjoyed this silent movie. It was quite funny! Some situations, like marriage, are universal no matter if it is in America or in India or Pakistan.😅😅😅😂😂😂👌👌
Any physical comedy translates well.
Buster was a master at making people laugh.
This is the beauty of silent films: they are universally understood with little to no translation needed. If you would like to do a longer Keaton film, I would recommend 'The General', which is my personal favorite. It is set during the American Civil War, and based on a true incident. While the original incident was tragic, Keaton built a very funny movie around it.
I've watched your reaction to 'Coco', and I'm glad you enjoyed it so much. I think you would like 'Encanto' as well.
I just came across this channel by accident today. I wish I'd known about it sooner.
I love how they are enjoying this!!
Badshah is so loving this. makes me laugh along with him.
How enjoyable to share this time with you. And to see how simple humour can be understood and shared by us all. Thank you my friends.
My grandfather playrd piano in theaters for the silent movies when he was a child.
Buster Keaton invented the idea of movie stunts. Literally nobody did it before as they believed it dangerous which it kinda was but buster did it safely.
Before Harold Lloyd?.
Great cue. I'd love to see a reaction to some of the most spectacular or dangeous physical movie stunts.
Buster was doing stunts since he was a toddler, he was part of a comedy act and his father would literally toss him around the stage, even into the crowd. His wee little outfit even had handles sewn onto the back to make it easier for his pop to throw him.
Buster was jackie chans idol to make his films
I mean... "safely" is in the eye of the beholder I guess. He got injured a lot.
btw what you see is what you get, buster keaton is actually taking the pain, a brilliant stuntsman Harold Lloyd is another master performer, hardout comedys with do or die consequences
The man who played Buster’s father was his father in real life! When Buster was little he and his parents did a comedy act on stage and later his dad was in some of his movies.
All of Buster’s movies are incredible but I think the guys will especially enjoy The Scarecrow, One Week, Sherlock Jr., or The Boat. I Loved watching their joyous reactions! ❤
Buster Keaton is the greatest stunt man ever.
It's interesting seeing these old silent films. I know who Keaton was. But I didn't know what a handsome fellow he was in his younger days.
Buster Keaton's real father Joe plays his father in this. They had a very rough (so rough they were accused of child abuse) slapstick comedy show before Buster started making movies. Joe would throw Buster through scenery, and once threw him at a heckler in the audience!
That was Buster's real dad playing his father.
I love it when people make up their own commentary for silent films 😂
after the chaplin one i was thinking they should watch a buster keaton movie. its like you read my mind haha. and the great thing about those movies is there is no copyright :P
The reactions from these guys is priceless..
I will watch several of these just to watch one of these guys say "...lest he or she does this or that funny or dangerous thing .
It is hilarious to watch these characters try and decide for themselves what is going on when you can read the subtitles and they can't.
Really funny,... and I like the tall guy... he is awesome..
Badshah laughing at silly movies makes my day so much better 🥰 love to Badshah and Babu Bhai from Austin, Texas USA
They are so innocent and easily entertained, it is amazing…
I love to see them laughing. It's a great choice using these older films with less culture-specific humor.
Slapstick is universal :)
"I bought a Ford" That was funny at the time, a common joke anyone with an injury would say to get a laugh. Model T Fords used mechanical hand brakes, they worked like the brakes on a bicycle and could be locked when the car was parked and a transmission (Drum rather than Disc) brake, it is neither powerful enough to work effectively and may even be damaged by trying to stop a moving vehicle, and those were only on the rear wheels. They were forced to either hit someone else or veer off into a pole or something because the handbrake required taking a hand off the wheel, they didn't have lanes or lights, no Yield or right of way, everyone for themselves, it was fun to watch, anywho, Fords didn't get 4 wheel braking systems until 1927 and wouldn't adapt hydraulic brakes fully until 1949 and then only for their trucks. Long story short "I bought a Ford" is hilarious if you get the context.
Actually I believe the joke refers to people that broke their arms trying to crank start it.
@@mycatz2fatgaming Well, Ford was the last of the Big 3 US manufacturers to switch to electric starters after 1920 and the movie was made in 1920, you're reasoning is valid. They also had the worst braking system with the drum brakes constantly breaking, no pun intended. Fords were the cheapest to buy & they were the cheapest to build, that's why they sold so many.
The filmmaker J.M.Schenck was born to a Jewish family in Rybinsk, Yaroslavl Oblast, Russian Empire. He emigrated to New York City on July 19, 1892 under the name Ossip Schenker. Around the time the movie was being shot, the Dearborn Independent was publishing a series of articles very critical of the the Jews. My guess is that scene was a swipe at Henry Ford.
@@ll7868 and @mycatz2fat - thank you both very much for the context! My guess was the hand-crank, my family actually still owned a couple of those old cranks, had them hanging on a barn wall for years, but I don't know what happened to them after we moved. Looking at all the characters involved, I'm going to guess they couldn't afford a Ford between them - they're all meant to be dirt poor, as hinted at by the 5-and-dime ring and the suit that doesn't fit! - which maybe adds yet another layer of humor to the remark.
A great deal of the humor of these sorts of movies from Charles Chaplain, Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd, the Stooges, Laurel and Hardy, the Bowery Boys, and other Vaudeville-era comedians revolves around the poverty of these characters, which I guess was pretty relatable for audiences through the Depression years especially, though I'm sure the Vaudevillians were no strangers to poverty themselves! A lot of the stories see these characters "pulling themselves up by the bootstraps" to "make good", trying to marry girls who are just a bit out of their league, trying to pass themselves off as being richer than they are, trying to dodge hotel bills, running scams or cheating at dice or other petty crimes to make ends meet, using invention and creativity to live a comfortable lifestyle with almost no money or property to work with (such as making a little food go a long way, like one short where Charlie Chaplain cooks one of his boots into a steak), trying to do something they can't afford cheaply and getting cheated (there's one great little short where Harold Lloyd, I believe, tries to build a house from a bargain-basement kit and puts the whole thing together totally wrong with hilarious results!), getting hired by rich people to do work and tearing the mansion down through sheer incompetence, and that sort of thing. Those poor characters are constantly being harassed by the police, where richer characters would be afforded more deference from judges and the law!
A lot of the humor would revolve around just how vague the boundaries between economic classes could be in America, and how virtuous, inventive, ambitious, and hard working characters could work around the limits of their poverty and ascend to a higher class almost over night: this "American Dream" idea was built into the spirit of those times in America, both as a fantasy, and often as a reality in ways that might seem a little strange today! In other cases, the humor plays on the poor "taking the piss" out of wealthy characters and "bringing them down a few pegs" toward the level of the common man. As an American, I take it all in stride without thinking about it much until I notice how times have changed, and I wonder how much of that aspect of the movies translates to other cultures, where the class system might be a little more rigid or unforgiving?
@@pietrayday9915 Mr. Bean reminds me of all those characters. He was like all these guys from the silent era too, not speaking was part of his charm, his body language and facial expressions said everything. Rowan Atkinson would have been huge in that era.
With regard to elder's song @ end of reactions please tell him: DON'T QUIT DAY JOB
Physical humor is best!
Please Show Them The Three Stooges or MR, Bean :D
Buster was the grandad of stunt men
Without speaking or reading English , these fellows endearingly were quite capable of understanding and appreciating what went on ! I liked it !
Buster is my favourite of The Big 3, Chaplin, Keaton and Harold Lloyd. There are behind the scenes videos explaining how they did their stunts and built the sets to look like they were real like the famous waterfall scene, everyone knew the woman was a dummy but the waterfall itself was built on a set, the clock Harold hung from in Safety Last! was also fake. The clock Jackie Chan hung from in Project A was very real as was the fall and nearly unaliving himself.
Silent before the Talkies.
I laughed so much
Can someone explain Badshah's situation or past or pain ? He has been referred to as perhaps a victim of terrible things. He seems like a very kind man.
His last jobs was fo Levi's rye Bread and Alka Seltzer.
I love to see Badshah laugh
Do you have any idea how much that Babe Ruth baseball would go for at an auction if it was real? Buster was a massive baseball fan, Babe Ruth was his favourite player, it could have been real.
Segue time.
"The Babe" appeared in a cameo in Harold Lloyd’s final silent comedy Speedy (1928) as himself, the scene was shot at the orphanage where George Herman "Babe" Ruth grew up. That should be their next reaction, then you'll have all Big 3 Actors from the Silent Era, Keaton, Chaplin and Lloyd.
Sidenote: John Goodman did a great job playing him in the biopic The Babe (1992).
"Speedy" was sooo good! I feel like if you're going to be introduced to a Lloyd film, it'd have to be "Safety Last" with the famous clock scene.
@@tigristhelynx7224 Speedy has more significance, it was Lloyd's last silent film and it has Babe Ruth in it. The Clock scene can be watched in a highlight reel, better yet just the clock scene and the behind the scenes how it was done would be a good reaction. If Jackie Chan knew it was a fake clock tower he might not have attempted to copy the stunt for real.
You should have them react to the movie "Terminator".
Gotta do the Lord of the Rings movies! Extended Editions, of course. ❤
The big guy looks better with a beard - distinguished!
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Why not just attach this channel to the other ones? The producers think they're slick.
We can thank Buster for jackie chan movies! he said him self, he was his idol. and burt renolds for the cuts that they failed on showing after every movie! ☝️😇👍