The Fraidy Cat (1924) Poster

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8/10
Don't be afraid to watch
hte-trasme17 October 2009
This appears to be one of the better-known of Charley Chase's early "Jimmy Jump" one-reelers because it also happens to feature the debut of Hal Roach's "Our Gang" kids. Here they are funny only as a foil to Chase -- a group of local kids who torment the super-cowardly Charley, and upon whom he gets his comeuppance after getting a burst of courage later. Fortunately, that humor reflecting off of Charley is very funny, as is the rest of the film.

One thing that Chase did really well was to take his basic character, put a simple but often outlandish twist on it, and draw great comedy out of the complications that naturally arise. He might be the world's most forgetful man (as in the much later "The Mind Needer") or even be afflicted by a strange condition that causes time to freeze every once in a while just for him (as in "Life Hesitates at 40"). Here, developing this trick, his problem is that he is extremely cowardly; when he overhears "diet a week" and thinks this means he will die in a week (though why he thinks his girlfriend's father is to be trusted with such a prognosis we don't know), his character reverses with very amusing results.

It's well-structured as always with Charley, but more slapsticky than usual, and happily the slapstick works well. The funniest sequence, though, is a wonderful gag that involves Charley not having to speak the romantic lines he wishes he could because the man across the hedge is doing it for him.

Watch for a shot where you can lip-read Charley speaking an expletive beginning with F that wouldn't be aloud in his later sound films.

This is an extremely funny little film with a satisfying story and good structure packed only into ten minutes -- Charley Chase represents himself well his fans (such as me) and for people who come to this short just for the Little Rascals.
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8/10
very short but effective comedy
planktonrules20 March 2006
This was a very short Charlie Chase comedy starring as the character "Jimmy Jump". Jimmy is a total wimp--so much so that even the neighborhood children pick on this man! Plus, his rival in love makes his life miserable by picking on him as well. Jimmy is so timid though, he never fights back--choosing in one case to sick him mom on the bullies! Later, Jimmy mistakenly thinks he's dying. So, with nothing to lose, he decides to give all the bullies their "comeuppance"--and it's great fun to watch him in action! While this is obviously NOT a deep film, it is short and well-paced and above all, entertaining. At only about 10 minutes, its well worth seeing and proves that Keaton, Lloyd and Chaplin were not the only funny men of the era.
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7/10
Charley Chase Jumps Back Into Performing
boblipton3 October 2021
Charley Chase returned to regular comedy performing with his 'Jimmy Jump' series of one-reelers for Roach in 1924. This is the eighth or ninth of the series. In it, he is a coward in love with Beth Darlington, but scared of everyone, including Earl Mohan, who also wishes to woo Miss Darlington, and the members of Our Gang. When he mishears the doctor and thinks he has one week to live, he finds his courage..... and some very funny gags.

Chase would continue with the one-reel comedies for another year, here under the direction of his brother, James Parrott, and later under Leo McCarey, before expanding his output to two-reels at a time, and begin a series of classic short comedies.
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Hilarious, the Little Rascal's film debut
Lou-59 October 2000
A little known fact is that the incomparable Charley Chase introduced the world to the Little Rascals. This is their first short. They play a bunch of annoying kids who torment poor Charley until he gets his nerve and fights back, with hilarious results. One of Chase's best.
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7/10
One of the better "Jimmy Jump" shorts
Paularoc31 August 2013
James Parrott, Charley Chase's younger brother, directed this short about the cowardly Jimmy. As one of the title cards says "Even the 'gang' has got Jimmy's goat - they've threatened to sic their pet rabbits on him." The gang members are the "Our Gang" kids but not the first of their film appearances, which was in 1922. Everyone bullies Jimmy, especially Lem Tucker who is chasing after Jimmy's true love, the doctor's daughter. When the doctor tells Jimmy that he needs to diet a week, Jimmy hears it as he will die in a week. Determined to 'go out like a man,' Jimmy gets tough with the kids and with Lem. There are a lot of funny bits in this one including one where Jimmy rides a bull to save the doctor's daughter from Lem. A highly entertaining Chase short.
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7/10
Young Joe Cobb
georgestrum24 March 2006
Joe Cobb is most interesting to watch. He was the youngest of the bunch and very precocious. He must have been something in real life. A very smart child who probably was able to follow the director's directions well. He may have been a little bit of a bully and bossy with a loud sassy mouth. I can imagine him causing some trouble and mischief with the other boys on the set. Too bad his career ended early but he ended up working on planes during WWII and stayed with it till he retired in 1981. I wonder what he looked like in later years and if he remained a heavy person. He reminded me of a young Jackie Gleason. Perhaps Jackie Gleason saw these films as a child himself.
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9/10
Jimmy Jump (Chase) is so shy and cowardly that when the Our Gang boys start picking on him he even takes a licking from little Joe Cobb!
larry41onEbay8 July 2003
Warning: Spoilers
SPOILERS: Jimmy Jump (Chase) is so shy and cowardly that when the Our Gang boys start picking on him, he even takes a licking from little Joe Cobb! He's too bashful to flirt with his girl, but gets lucky when she overhears another fellow pitching woo to his sweetheart on the other side of the shrubery and thinks it's Jimmy speaking. After calling on his mother to chase off the neighborhood bullies with a broom and being beaten by his own punching dummy, a doctor tells him he only has a week to die. Faced with inevitable doom, Jimmy stands up to the rival for his girlfriend's affections, gets back at all the Little Rascals and even rides a bull to rescue his sweetheart from a kidnapping. Only after he defeats all his foes and wins his true love does he find out that what the doctor acutally said was that he only had a week to diet! Packed with sweet funny bits and classic slapstick, this charmer holds up great!
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8/10
Both versions of Charley Chase...
NellsFlickers8 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I like to think of this short as one which shows both types of Chase characters... the milquetoast one, and also the less common rough & tough one.

Seeing a grown up Jimmy Jump teased and bullied by the original Our Gang, who in real life Chase played a role in bringing to the screen in the early 1920s, is a hoot. The misunderstanding that turns him into a tough-guy bent on getting revenge is also a hoot... WHY would anyone tell someone as thin as Chase to "diet a week"??

A good short that should make you chuckle!
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8/10
Charley Chase deals with annoyances-which include Our Gang-as The Fraidy Cat
tavm23 September 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I'm taking a break from watching Our Gang shorts in chronological order to review one in which they appear in another comic's series. In this case, it's Charley Chase's as his character Jimmy Jump. As the title implies, he's someone who doesn't assert himself too much, so much so the gang (excluding Mary Kornman and Allen "Farina" Hoskins who don't appear) constantly pester him to his annoyance. He has a girlfriend but also a rival who likes to pester him as well. I'll stop there and just say this was quite a funny short whether Jimmy is teased or turns tables near the end. And the version I saw on YouTube has a nice score by Ben Model. So on that note, I highly recommend The Fraidy Cat.
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Becoming Charley Chase
Michael_Elliott10 March 2008
Fraidy Cat, The (1924)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

Jimmy Jump (Charley Chase) is the biggest coward in town as everyone picks on him. This includes the Our Gang group who shoot water on him and make is life on scare after another. Jimmy then learns he's going to die in a week so he decides to go out like a man. This is without question one of the best of the early Chase movies as he's just so good in the role of the coward that you can't help but love him but also love to see him get tormented. The Our Gang group made their debut here and their childish charm is easy to spot and it's easy to see why they would get their own series. Chase handles the material very easily and makes for a great number of laughs but one of my favorites has to be the scenes in his bedroom where he has a dummy that he picks on to try and build up courage. There's a lot more slapstick here than in your typical Jimmy Jump film but that's okay because Chase does this perfectly well.
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A tale of two Parrotts
kekseksa19 November 2017
It was the Jimmy Jump series of one-reelers that first brought Charley Chase into the limelight as a performer and they remain to my mind, the best stuff he ever did. The short format suited him perfectly; the longer shorts immediately became messier and more randomly slapstick. This particular "Jimmy Jump" is directed by brother James and is not perhaps one of the best; the finest are those written and directed by Leo McCarey. They have a comic invention and a sharp pithy humour that Chase never really reproduced in the rest of his career. He himself seems to have preferred "safe" and undemanding subjects, eventually settling for the charming but unadventurous, slightly geriatric slapstick shorts of the sound era.

This one is really only of particular interest because of the rare outing of the Our Gang kids in force in another Roach comedy. Interestingly the Pathescope 9.5m version was re-titled "Paul Becomes a Caveman", with no attempt to distinguish Charley Parrott from his (at this point still more famous brother) James, who acted under the name Paul Parrott and was already a popular Pathescope star.
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