The title refers to eager beaver Harold Lloyd's
needing to get (her) dad's permission to marry, easier hoped for than done. Two
clever gags make up nucleus of this single reel: Bebe Daniels laying pillows at
a distance in anticipation of Harold being thrown their way, and slapstick
aboard a moving walkway installed in offices HL tries to crash. The latter was
variation on Chaplin's escalator business in The Floorwalker. Comics could
devise much on mechanical, thus peril-laden, props, plus audiences were
fascinated with devices so exotic. Buster Keaton would go Lloyd and Chaplin
better by shaping shorts around gadgetry gone haywire, this playing well to
1919'ers that didn't trust infernal machinery to start with. Annette D'AgostinoLloyd says in her indispensable Harold Lloyd Encyclopediathat Ask Father was
his 48th "Glass" character short, and that Harold by this time was
getting $300 per week from boss Hal Roach. HL had by 1919 ridden his own escalator to a top among
screen clowns. In portent of stuntwork to come, he scales up a building to
achieve Ask Father ends, early evidence that screen Harold would do anything to make
success. It was this quality above all that endeared him to
20's viewership.
2 Comments:
Is this one out on DVD anywhere?
Hi Dr. OTR --- "Ask Father" is on Volume One of the Harold Lloyd set from his estate negatives.
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