
In the event of rain, this screening will take place on July 24.
Our Hospitality. 1923. USA. Directed by Buster Keaton and John G. Blystone. With Keaton. Silent; Musical accompaniment by Ben Model. 65 min.
Released in 1923, Our Hospitality was Buster Keaton’s second feature-length film, but the first (after the episodically constructed Three Ages) to fully develop the possibilities of an extended narrative. Where his two-reel shorts could string together improbable and often physically impossible gags into a surreal, stream-of-unconsciousness structure, the extended running time of a five- or six-reel feature meant that gags had to be grounded in character and situation in order to sustain the audience’s interest and belief.
The situation that Keaton and his gagmen (Jean C. Havez, Clyde Bruckman, and Joseph A. Mitchell) settled on was the well-worn legend of the Hatfield-McCoy feud, a family rivalry fueled by the Civil War. Keaton moves the conflict back to the 1830s, placing his conflict in a nascent United States just being bound together by the primitive railroad that Keaton mines so memorably for comedy.
Traveling south by train from rural New York City, Keaton’s Willie McKay falls under the spell of a fellow passenger, Virginia Canfield (Natalie Talmadge, Keaton’s then-wife), only to find when he reaches his southern homestead that his new friend’s relations are gunning for him. Beginning in a casual, observational mode, the film, under the direction of Keaton and John G. Blystone, gradually accumulates mass and velocity as it builds to a spectacular climax.
This is the New York premiere of a new restoration from Lobster Films, based in part on an original print in MoMA’s collection. Special thanks to Serge Bromberg and the Lobster team.