Ten years elapsed between W.C.
Fields's debut in the 1915 short "The Pool Sharks" and
his role in D.W. Griffith's Sally of the Sawdust, but it didn't
take long for Fields to become one of the all-time great screen
comedians. This essential collection--the silent "The Pool
Sharks" plus the five "two-reeler" sound shorts that
established Fields's acerbic style--provides a comprehensive document
of the comedian's work in progress. "The Pool Sharks"
develops a routine that Fields created in vaudeville and later perfected
on film, with stop-motion animation used here to realize the comedian's
wacky luck at billiards. It's a clever appetizer, but Fields was
a verbal comic, so the two-reelers are the full-course meal.
Like the Marx brothers' The Cocoanuts a year earlier, 1930's "The
Golf Specialist" mines humor from high jinks in sunny Florida,
where Fields is nearly upstaged by a stone-faced golf caddy. The
classic "The Dentist," despite the later addition of strident
musical cues, is presented in its entirety, including an oft-censored
bit in which Fields tugs a molar from a woman who's wrapped around
him in a highly suggestive position. "The Pharmacist"
and "The Barbershop" are variations on the theme, allowing
Fields to toss off bons mots and scathing sarcasm, but it's the
anomalous "The Fatal Glass of Beer"--a hilarious send-up
of Yukon gold-rush adventures--that proves an unlikely highlight.
It's typically sour-pussed in its agenda, with a running gag (involving
the line "It ain't a fit night out for man nor beast")
that just grows funnier with each repetition. Fields's comedy wasn't
fully developed here--he became masterful in later features--but
6 Short Films is crucial in demonstrating his rapid refinement of
the vintage Fields persona. |