Buster
Keaton, Kathrun McGuire, Fred Vroom , Clarence Burton, H.M. Clugston,
Noble Johnson
At the request of his star Buster
Keaton, producer Joseph M. Schenck purchased an obsolete ocean liner
for $20,000. Keaton wanted to use the boat as a "prop"
in his upcoming feature comedy, but went into production with nary
a plot idea in his head. Eventually, Buster and his chief gagman
Clyde Bruckman came up with a story involving two wealthy, pampered
young people (played by Keaton and Kathryn McGuire), who through
a series of fantastic but logical plot convolutions end up stranded
together on a drifting, deserted ocean liner. At first, the young
couple is helpless because they've never had to lift a finger in
their lives. As the weeks pass, Keaton and McGuire become quite
adept at fending for themselves, utilizing the huge facilities of
the liner (its steam room, its enormous kitchen) for the simplest
and most basic of necessities. An attack by a cannibal tribe requires
Keaton to be more resourceful than ever; the build-up to the climactic
contretemps between Keaton and the cannibals is almost as side-splitting
as the climax itself. While the film is rife with some of Buster
Keaton's most elaborate gags, he scores equally well with smaller,
more intimate comedy bits, notably his losing battle with a deck
chair and his attempt to shuffle a waterlogged deck of cards. Reasoning
that the comedy in The Navigator would work best if built upon an
utterly serious storyline, Keaton hired actor/director Donald Crisp
to handle the "straight" scenes. Alas, as Keaton would
later recall, the constitutionally humorless Crisp "turned
gagman on us", resulting in miles of wasted footage. Thus,
pay no attention to the "official" directorial credits:
Buster Keaton alone is responsible for the helming of The Navigator.
Joe Schenck's initial 20 grand investment proved sagacious when
Navigator ended up as Buster Keaton's most profitable silent feature
film.
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