The '?' Motorist
Dir: Walter R. Booth, Robert W. Paul
1906
*****
The '?' Motorist was to be one
of the last films that Walter R. Booth made for the
producer-inventor Robert W. Paul and lead to more
elaborate fantasies that he would make for Charles Urban between 1907 and 1911,
as well as drawing on a wide range of the visual tricks that he had developed
over the preceding half-decade. It is by far my favourite of his short films
and I would argue that it was/is one of his most remarkable. It is a brilliant
premise; A policeman attempts to stop a reckless motorist, only for the driver to run him over and escape by driving up the walls of tall buildings, along the edges of clouds and
even around the rings of Saturn. This
was clearly a British effort to top Georges
Méliès at his Sci-Fi/fantasy/comedy trick films. Méliès was an illusionist at heart who
brought trick photography to life but I would argue that it was the films and
stories of Walter R. Booth and Robert W. Paul that would have a longer lasting
influence on modern cinema. It was certainly a huge influence on the Keystone
Cops and indeed the rest of the later Keystone Comedies. It still amazing now,
over a hundred years later and I’m still not sure how every effect was created.
It’s also of a timeless humour, I still belly laugh at it, despite its age and
how many times I’ve seen it. It’s a great legacy from the work of great men and
certainly where I developed my love of silliness and the surreal when it comes to
comedy.
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