One of Max Linder's better comedies from this period. He's given an ultimatum by his sweetheart here: recover the engagement ring she has thrown into the sea in order to force him to overcome his fear of water or lose her forever. A real catch, then - the thoughtful and considerate type you'd want to spend the rest of your life with.
2 Reviews
Hydrophobia
boblipton26 February 2009
Alas, Max has a neurosis about getting wet, so his fiancée throws him over: she tosses her engagement ring on a ribbon into the ocean and announces that if Max wants to get her back, he must produce the ring and ribbon.
Max is particularly good playing a bit of a maniac, and he is at his most amusing here, first with his not terribly unusual distaste for the ocean, then with his attempts to resign himself to the horrible stuff and finally with the concluding gag.
Before the rise of Charlie Chaplin, Max Linder was the world's most successful movie comic and one of the few people that Chaplin cited as an influence on himself. In a career that ran from 1905 through 1924, he rang most of the comic changes between Pierrot and pure slapstick. A necessary -- and entertaining -- performer for anyone interested in the history of movies.
Max is particularly good playing a bit of a maniac, and he is at his most amusing here, first with his not terribly unusual distaste for the ocean, then with his attempts to resign himself to the horrible stuff and finally with the concluding gag.
Before the rise of Charlie Chaplin, Max Linder was the world's most successful movie comic and one of the few people that Chaplin cited as an influence on himself. In a career that ran from 1905 through 1924, he rang most of the comic changes between Pierrot and pure slapstick. A necessary -- and entertaining -- performer for anyone interested in the history of movies.
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