A Movie Star (1916) Poster

(1916)

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7/10
With "LIVE" music that complements the action, this little gem shines!
larry41onEbay7 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I was lucky enough to catch this short at a film festival (either CINEVENT, CINEFEST or CINESATION) a few years back and the audience couldn't have loved it more! Made in 1916, it is a two-reel spoof of the early movie industry. SPOILERS: It starts with comedic (and literal at 6'2) giant Mack Swain playing a ham actor going to a neighborhood movie theatre where his latest western is about to be shown. He poses next to his likeness on the film's poster out front until someone recognizes him and then he acts meek. (A running joke is that he keeps doing things to be center of attention and then acts humble as he starts reciting a long list of his accomplishments.) The manger of the theater, upon recognizing the "star," even has the projectionist create a magic lantern slide to announce the "star's" presence to the audience and to ask him to take a bow. To balance the adoration for our hero, a "real" actor from the legitimate stage also attends the showing and frowns at every appearance of the "flicker star" on the screen. Meanwhile our hero leads the applause every chance he gets as the audience and us viewers watch the western romance unfold on the screen. Polly Moran can be spotted as a star-struck fan sitting just behind Max Swain in the cinema. My girlfriend loved the pianist in the film accompanying the western with bells, whistles, gun shots, drum beats, and sound effect galore. With the right music, this little comedy gem goes from a 6 to a 9!
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7/10
Stardom Revealed
DKosty12313 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
A scary thought here is how the idiotic attitude towards stars that still exists today is revealed way back in 1916. Mack Swain stars & is at the center of this well thought out and plotted comedy. When you look at it as a whole, you realize that if you fast forward to today, replace Swain with any number of today's celebrities the story has not changed. The circumstances and technology has.

Swain plays the star and hero of a Western Romance being shown at the local theater. He shows up to see the movie and this causes a celebrity showing of the film. There is some major support in the plot. There is the woman in the audience sitting next to and becoming smitten with the star. The critic who comes in and constantly pans the star. The jealous boyfriend of the smitten one. The sound effects guy at the keyboard accompanying the show. The projectionist and the theater manager who plot to get everything they can out of the star being there.

The movie has a great ending too (spoiler) in that Swain is playing a little fast and loose with his family by going to the theater and trying to exploit his starring role. In this one, it's doesn't take the technology of a cell phone or the internet for Swain to get caught. It is more physical but still in great fun.
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7/10
A film within a film!
AlsExGal2 July 2023
With his rather unique and off-beat appearance, Mack Swain, with his thick moustache and hairlick that reached down to his eyebrows, hardly looks like the image most people conjure up when they think of a movie star. But then, these were the early days of the movies.

Mack Swain as Big Hearted Jack is making an appearance at a premier of his new film. It's not a movie premiere as it existed even ten years later, but instead it is a primitive impromptu affair. Jack just sits in the front row with the audience. The women are enthralled by Jack, but the men - not so much. A Shakesperean actor in the audience is open in his disdain.

The film within the film is a western that has Jack's sweetheart getting her head turned by a city slicker, an Indian attack, a wild shoot out, and Jack riding in to save the day. All while Big Hearted Jack discusses the film with the women in the audience and encourages them to clap at the right spots. All the while, Harry McCoy labors away in the corner as a one man orchestra and sound effects man.

The end is quite a surprise for the ladies in the audience when the truth about their hero raises their ire. I'll let you watch and find out what that truth is.

For 1916 this is a very subtle piece of comedy and a look at what an average movie patron might encounter and what an average movie theater might have as far as technology. It really is cleverly done.
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Entertaining Self-Parody
Snow Leopard5 February 2002
This short feature has some pretty good comedy that is a bit more understated than Mack Sennett's usual fare, and it is also an entertaining self-parody of the movie industry (as it existed in the 1910's - but surely there are close parallels in any era). It has a film-within-a-film setup that works pretty well, with Mack Swain as "A Movie Star" watching one of his own films. The parallel action comes across well most of the time, and it is worth watching the audience closely for the details of their responses to the screen action. It seems a little more structured than many of Sennett's earlier films, but it also has a good dose of the roughneck slapstick for which he was usually known. This one's worth a look for anyone who likes silent comedies.
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9/10
Movie star has to compete with theater full of scene stealers
morrisonhimself24 July 2021
Poor Mack Swain was surrounded by dozens of Steve McQueens, scene-stealing hams -- but who were thoroughly delightful in their hamminess.

Swain was a good actor in more than 150 movies, many of them quite short.

Here his character even gets a few minutes to show he was a good cowboy, riding a horse surprisingly well.

His movie star character, just by being a movie star, draws female fans by the score, and as they all sit in the theatre to watch his latest opus, they ooh and ahh at his on-screen character, then do it some more after the film ends, ingratiating the theater manager but enraging the male companions of those females.

The movie's ending should not be surprising, but it's still funny, and the short time we've been watching seems all the shorter because it is funny, charmingly funny.

Swain is not exactly the hero type, and maybe that makes the character he plays even funnier. He is the only performer here who might be known today but, though he's been gone since 1935, he is known, at least among aficionados of early motion pictures. Please, if you can, do grab the opportunity to watch "A Movie Star."
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The Cinema Experience
Cineanalyst11 September 2005
Keystone comedies aren't very funny anymore, and they were often crude even for their day, but Mack Sennett could be an intelligent filmmaker in addition to being an interesting businessman. He was dividing out his responsibilities in actually making the films by now, transforming Keystone into a more typical and efficient movie studio, but what makes "A Movie Star" remarkable can be seen in other Sennett comedies, such as "Mabel's Dramatic Career" (1913). That is, Sennett helped introduced self-referential humor to screen comedy--films that poke fun at themselves, other movies, movie-making and the other aspects surrounding the cinema experience--adding new dimensions and depth to the comedies.

"A Movie Star" isn't uproariously funny, but the comedy is thankfully not the completely unrefined and unsubtle knockabout slapstick one finds in other Keystone fare, especially the earliest ones. This short satirizes the egotistical movie star (well played by Mack Swain), their daft fans and the cheap nickelodeons. There's also a jealous boyfriend of a swooning idolater and a stodgy stage actor, which serves as a humorous antagonism to Swain's character, as all of them sit in the crowded, dinky theatre to view Swain's film-within-a film, "Big Hearted Jack": a Western romance presented by Thrill'Em Films.

The scene is wonderful, with shot transitions between the film, the audience and the audience watching the film, which is more elaborate than the simpler sequence in "Mabel's Dramatic Career". The film-within-the film parodies film conventions, namely of Westerns and melodramas, and Swain is delightful in mocking contemporary acting styles. Additionally, the sequence impressively creates an atmosphere of the movie-going experience, which becomes more powerful with the age of the film, which itself was recreating a recent past of the nickelodeon age. It adds to the sense of the wonder of cinema that it's mocking, and even displays the work that goes into showing films (the one-man orchestra, the projectionist and such). "A Movie Star" is a significant film in how it turns in on itself, and (unusual given the typically outdated Keystone slapstick) it has actually improved with age.
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