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Speedy (film)

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Director
  
Ted Wilde

Duration
  

7.8/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Action, Comedy, Family

Country
  
United States

Speedy (film) movie poster

Language
  
Silent film English intertitles

Release date
  
April 7, 1928 (1928-04-07)

Writer
  
John Grey (story), Lex Neal (story), Howard Emmett Rogers (story)

Music director
  
Carl Davis, Don Peake, Don Hulette

Screenplay
  
Al Boasberg, Paul Girard Smith, Albert DeMond, Howard Emmett Rogers, J.A. Howe, John Grey, Lex Neal

Cast
  
Harold Lloyd
(Harold 'Speedy' Swift),
Ann Christy
(Jane Dillon),
Bert Woodruff
(Pop Dillon - Her Grand-daddy),
Brooks Benedict
(Steve Carter),
Babe Ruth
(George Herman Ruth)

Similar movies
  
Coney Island
,
The Affair of Susan
,
Noah's Lark
,
The Warriors
,
Love Never Dies
,
The Weird World Of Weird: Volume 2

Tagline
  
You've Waited a Year for This But WOW! What a Hit!

Speedy is a 1928 silent film that was one of the films to be nominated for the short-lived Academy Award for Best Director of a Comedy. The film stars famous comedian Harold Lloyd in the eponymous leading role, and it was his last silent film to be released in theatres.

Contents

Speedy (film) movie scenes

The film was written by Albert DeMond (titles), John Grey (story), J.A. Howe (story), Lex Neal (story), and Howard Emmett Rogers (story) with uncredited assistance from Al Boasberg and Paul Girard Smith. The film was directed by Ted Wilde, the last silent film to be directed by him, and was shot in both Hollywood, and on location in New York City.

Speedy (film) movie scenes

Plot

Speedy (film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters51226p51226

Everybody in New York City "is in such a hurry that they take Saturday's bath on Friday so they can do Monday's washing on Sunday". But in one slower-paced, "old-fashioned corner of the city", Pop Dillon (Burt Woodruff) owns and operates the city's last horse-drawn streetcar. His granddaughter Jane Dillon (Ann Christy) is in love with Harold "Speedy" Swift (Harold Lloyd).

Speedy (film) Speedy 1928 with Harold Lloyd Hidden Films

Speedy, an avid New York Yankees fan, is working at a soda shop. As well as doing his work, he takes frequent telephone calls during Yankees games and passes the line scores on to the kitchen staff by arranging food items in a display case (such as doughnuts for zeroes). But he loses the job after he is ordered to deliver some flowers and lets someone close a car door on them when he gets distracted by a display of baseball scores in a shop window.

Speedy (film) Speedy Film TV Tropes

Streetcar magnate W.S. Wilton (Byron Douglas) comes to Pop's home to ask for his price to sell the car line, but Speedy spots a newspaper article and realizes that this is part of a plan to form a streetcar monopoly in the city. He surreptitiously raises Pop's written price from $10,000 to $70,000. Wilton angrily refuses and threatens to force Pop out instead.

Speedy (film) Speedy 1928

Speedy is unworried about being unemployed; he is very much used to losing jobs and finding new ones. He and Jane go to Coney Island, where they greatly enjoy themselves despite various mishaps, such as Speedy ruining his suit jacket by leaning against wet paint. On the way home along with a stray dog that decided to follow them, Speedy proposes to Jane, but she will not marry him until her grandfather's affairs are settled.

Speedy (film) Speedy 1928

Speedy is hired as a taxi driver, but for some time a series of mishaps prevents him from actually taking a passenger, and he antagonizes a policeman. Then, to his delight, Babe Ruth (playing himself) hails the cab to get to Yankee Stadium. Although terrified by Speedy's driving, he offers Speedy a ticket to the game; but the taxi owner is there, sees Speedy in the seats when he should be working, and fires him.

At the stadium, Speedy happens to overhear Wilton on the telephone. Wilton has learned that if Pop fails to operate the horsecar every 24 hours he will lose his right to the line, and orders goons to be sent to disrupt the operation. Speedy rushes home and arranges with small-business owners on the street to organize a defense. The goons are beaten off with the help of Speedy's dog, but return and steal the horse and car.

Again helped by his dog, Speedy finds out where the car has been taken and manages to steal it back. In a madcap chase scene, he brings it back across the city to Pop's tracks, stealing fresh horses, tricking police to avoid being stopped, and replacing a broken wheel with a manhole cover.

When Wilton sees the horsecar in place, he agrees to meet Pop's price. Speedy says that Pop is a bit deaf and won't hear him until he offers $100,000. Wilton agrees, and Speedy suggests to Jane that they plan a visit to Niagara Falls by horsecar.

The finger

During the Coney Island sequence, at one point Speedy gives the finger to himself while looking in a distorted mirror. This may be the earliest motion picture depiction of that gesture.

Production

Location shooting for the Coney Island scenes cost a reported $150,000.

Cast

  • Harold Lloyd as Harold 'Speedy' Swift
  • Ann Christy as Jane Dillon
  • Bert Woodruff as Pop Dillon - Her Grand-daddy
  • Byron Douglas as W.S. Wilton
  • Brooks Benedict as Steve Carter
  • Babe Ruth as himself
  • References

    Speedy (film) Wikipedia
    Speedy (film) IMDb Speedy (film) themoviedb.org