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Keystone Hotel | |
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Directed by | Ralph Staub |
Written by | Joe Traub |
Distributed by | Warner Brothers |
Release date |
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Running time | 15 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Keystone Hotel is a 1935 two-reel comedy short subject, directed by Ralph Staub and released by the Vitaphone Corporation through Warner Bros. Pictures. Inspired by the silent comedies produced by Mack Sennett, the film reunites many of Sennett's former stars.
Cross-eyed Count Drewa Blanc arrives at the busy Keystone Hotel to judge a fashion show.
In the hotel lobby, the chief of police, the mayor, and a gangster try to sway the Count's decision. Upstairs, the house detective investigates some marital shenanigans, some involving a vibrating exercise machine.
The fashion show is held in a banquet hall, where the hotel manager introduces the contestants. The winner is chosen, but the myopic Count awards the trophy to the wrong woman. The winner protests, "How dare you give it to her when I should get it!" She does—an airborne pie misses its target and hits her. This prompts a huge pie fight, and the hotel detective sends for the Keystone Cops. The Cops spring into action and encounter several detours and difficulties before crashing into the hotel.
In an interview with Leonard Maltin, director Ralph Staub recalled:
The studio went ahead with silent-comedy revivals anyway, consulting its backlog of Mack Sennett silent comedies and compiling them as new two-reel subjects with wisecracking narration. This series of six shorts ran from 1939 to 1945, beginning with a two-reel condensation of the Ben Turpin feature A Small Town Idol. The others were Love's Intrigue, Happy Faces, Wedding Yells, Happy Times and Jolly Moments, and Good Old Corn.[2] The series continued as "Vitaphone Novelties" (now one reel each, ending with Here We Go Again in 1952). Many of these Warner shorts included footage from Keystone Hotel, without the soundtrack, as exhibits of "authentic" Keystone comedy.
Warner Bros. reissued Keystone Hotel to theaters in 1947 with a new title sequence and an updated musical score. The 1947 edition was first reprinted for television in 1957, and was edited into a one-reel, silent 8mm home movie in 1967. The 1947 reissue is the version that aired on Turner Classic Movies.