Tweedledum Aviator-1911-Marcel Perez-An Italian slapstick comedy film-Full silent movie
Tweedledum Aviator (It. Robinet aviatore), 1911, directed and starring
Marcel Perez and produced by Società Anonima Ambrosio, is a crazy comedy silent film. Tweedldum ( Robinet), the lead in this
Italian slapstick comedy, wants to be an aviator in the worst way, and this being an Italian slapstick, that's how he does it. Italian slapstick in this period was absolutely bone-breaking, so much so that it makes
Keystone slapstick look like drawing-room comedy by contrast.
Although the course of this comedy is not terribly surprising -- Robinet gets in the air and causes general destruction, mostly by knocking the tops off tall buildings -- the design of his aircraft is particularly amusing. It resembles a giant sturgeon with a forward propeller and one on top -- an auto-gyro of some sort -- with wings and, of course, a jaw hinged to open and close constantly, suggesting, perhaps a crocodile.
Marcel Perez, born Marcel
Fernández Peréz (
January 29, 1884 –
February 8, 1929), was an internationally celebrated Spanish-born creator and star of over 200 silent comedy short subjects. He directed himself in nearly two-thirds of these films, acting, on two continents under such names as Marcel
Fabre,
Michel Fabre, Fernandea Perez,
Manuel Fernández Pérez, Robinet, Tweedy, Tweedledum, and Twede-Dan.
Born in
Madrid, Perez began his professional career by working as a circus clown in
Paris. His film career started with comedy films of the production companies
Pathé Frères and Éclair. In 1910
Arturo Ambrosio signed him for his production company, Ambrosio Films. Perez directed several comedies while working for the production company. He had directed and acted in the sci-fi film
The Extraordinary Adventures of Saturnino
Farandola, a series of 18 episodes released on the eve of first
World War and based on a science fiction novel by
Robida. He had played the character of Saturnino Farandola in the film which explored the idea of a voyage around the world. Perez had directed and played the character of Robinet in over 150 films produced by Ambrosio films and was thus popularly called Robinet in
Italy. He had directed the 1914 melodrama film
Amor Pedestre (translation
Pedestrian Love), which did not show any body part of the lead actor or actress except their feet.
During the
First World War, Perez left Italy and went to the
United States.
In America, he was popularly called Tweedle-Dum, Twede-Dan and Tweedy, but among his earliest
American movies were a series of four
Bungles comedies:
Bungles' Rainy Day,
Bungles Enforces the Law,
Bungles' Elopement and
Bungles Lands a Job. The Bungles shorts co-starred
Oliver Hardy and were produced by
Jacksonville's
Vim Comedy Company. Perez began his decade-long occasional collaborations with
William A. Seiter on the
1918 military comedy film
The Recruit.
Concurrent with his early-1920's short subject work, Perez directed
Rubye De Remer in three features; what might have become a more extensive teaming was ended, in part, by her early retirement.
Following a cancer-related leg amputation in 1923, his film work was confined almost exclusively to writing and directing, most notably the Alyce Ardell comedies for producer
Joe Rock. By early
1924, Perez was reportedly earning $400 weekly as a
Jimmy Aubrey gagman. He was married to the actress Dorothy Earle.
Ressources:
Wikipedia.org, imdb.com
New soundtrack and dubbing:
Cinema History Channel
Music: Kevin Mac
Leod (incompetch.com) licensed under
Creative Commons licence:
Attribution 3.0 Unported (CC BY
3.0).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/