User: hoverground |
Radiohead Buster Keaton style Buster keaton clips set to radiohead...get ready Tags: radiohead buster keaton stunts music video |
User: weepingprophet |
A Buster Keaton Montage I always get annoyed when I do a search on "Buster Keaon" and find nothing but clips set to contemporary music. Well, call me a hypocrite. I wanted to make a video celebrating one of cinemas greatest geniuses, and oddly enough the idea came to me while listening to this Pixies track. I think the two go well together. Tags: buster keaton pixies down to the well |
User: drmoonrat |
The Great Buster Keaton The greatest physical comedian ever known. Here is a tribute made from clips of his movies and short films. The music and opening title is from the BBC Documentary, "Buster Keaton: A Hard Act To Follow" Tags: buster keaton tribute ode busterkeaton silent slapstick comedy stunts falls gags musical film the great best of clip |
User: Damfin0 |
Buster Keaton Performing Stunts in The General Buster Keaton Performing Stunts in The General with commentary from Buster Keaton Rides Again. The full length Buster Keaton films can be watched or downloaded from here http://www.MikeCottrell.com/keaton.html Tags: Buster Keaton silent Slapstick comedy funny film movie the general |
User: hustlerock |
BUSTER KEATON The GENERAL The GENERAL is the silent movie made by BUSTER KEATON . And after the sound track on by Japanese famous music creator Joe Hisaishi. http://www.dex-et.jp/Ncontents/dvd/dex_dvd0065.html Tags: BUSTER KEATON The GENERAL Joe Hisaishi 久石譲 |
User: cromulantman |
buster keaton - Steamboat Bill Jr. one of the most rememberable clips of buster keaton Tags: buster keaton steamboat steam boat bill jr. house falling window |
User: SirMixItAllUp |
Buster Keaton in "Hard Luck" (1921 short film), part 3/3 From Wikipedia: Hard Luck is a 1921 short comedy film starring comedian Buster Keaton. It was written and directed by Keaton and Edward F. Cline. The runtime is 22 minutes. For sixty years it was Keaton's only major lost film until it was partially reconstructed in 1987, with the critical final scene (which Keaton called the greatest laugh-getting scene of his career) still missing. This scene was later discovered in a foreign archive print, and now the full film is available. from imdb.com: Directed by Edward F. Cline Buster Keaton Produced by Joseph M. Schenck Written by Edward F. Cline Buster Keaton Starring: Buster Keaton Virginia Fox Joe Roberts Bull Montana Cinematography Elgin Lessley Editing by Buster Keaton Distributed by Metro Pictures Release date(s) March 16, 1921 Running time 22 min. from an interview with Buster by Malcolm H. Oettinger in Picture-Play Magazine, March 1923: "We just wrap up a little hokum," he will tell you. "We build up a little story on some sure-fire idea, throw in a dozen gags, if we can think of 'em, and let 'er ride. The scenario we use is written on the correspondence end of a picture post card. If it's lost its no great matter." You cannot read hidden motifs into the Keaton spoolings. You cannot persuade him that there was a hint of satire concealed in his last comedy, or the one before that. You cannot coerce him into admitting that he planned an unique characterization which he has steadfastly maintained. He will take credit for nothing. Not even his make-up. "The pancake hat and the oversized collar and the misfit suit and the slapstick shoes are my old vaudeville stand-bys. My father rigged me out as a third of The Three Keatons, when I was too young to 'originate' anything but a yowl! I've kept the same make-up ever since--guess I always will." Solemnity is more than a habit with Keaton; it's ingrown. Throughout our conversation his face was stony. Nor was this an exception to his usual attitude. I have seen him in the turmoil of a comic sequence, a business of break-away ladders, swinging ropes, and trapdoor scaffoldings; I have seen him eyeing the proceedings at one of Manhattan's most energizing nights clubs; I have seen him purring at his baby in father-like fashion; I have seen him casually viewing the day's rushes, and upon not one but all of these occasions Buster wore an expression that was infinitely more sphinxlike than the Sphinx ever thought of being. His is an entirely emotionless face, suggesting most of all, a mask. It is the ideal phiz for a droll pantaloon. "You originated the idea of never smiling," I supposed. But Buster refused to take credit for it. In the days of The Three Keatons, it seems, his father taught him never to crack a smile. The habit grew on him. Now it is so deeply rooted that it is almost impossible for him to grin. It has long been one of the beliefs of the American Credo that all comedians are, off stage, lugubrious fellows, and never was a truth more apparent than in the appearance and behavior of Buster Keaton. His countenance is little short of funereal, his speech laconic, his outlook none too sanguine. Tags: 1921 BusterKeaton comedy silentmovie slapstick stunts gags |
User: Oscars |
Diane Keaton winning Best Actress Oscar® for "Annie Hall" Diane Keaton winning an Oscar - Best Actress, "Annie Hall" - 50th Annual Academy Awards® Tags: oscar oscars academy awards diane keaton annie hall |
User: depplover63 |
Mr. Mom (1983) Trailer Hilarious! Michael Keaton rocks! "Wanna beer?" "It's 7 o'clock in the morning!" "Scotch?" Tags: michael keaton terri garr jeffrey tambor mr mom |
User: oolai |
MASTER KEATON マスターキートン OP MASTER KEATON マスターキートン play-on Tags: MASTER KEATON マスターキートン アニメ |