Screened as part of NZIFF 2017

Safety Last! 1923

Directed by Fred Newmeyer, Sam Taylor

The Christchurch Symphony Orchestra puts the music back into two great classics of silent comedy. Marc Taddei conducts Carl Davis’ original score for Harold Lloyd’s Safety Last! and Timothy Brock’s arrangement of Neil Brand’s 2012 score for the classic Charlie Chaplin short, Easy Street.

USA In English
67 minutes B&W / DCP

Screenplay

Hal Roach
,
Sam Taylor
,
Tim Whelan
,
Harold Lloyd

Photography

Walter Lundin

Editor

T.J. Crizer

With

Harold Lloyd (the boy)
,
Mildred Davis (the girl)
,
Bill Strother (the pal)
,
Noah Young (the law)
,
Westcott B. Clarke (the floorwalker)

Music by Carl Davis

Music performed by arrangement with Faber Music Ltd, London

Music for Safety Last commissioned by Thames Television for Channel 4.
CSO

“The most famous image of silent comedy – Harold Lloyd hanging from the hands of a clock, 12 stories above the streets of Los Angeles – represents only one of the great moments in what could be the most brilliantly sustained comic climax in film history.  A marvel, and there's more in the fine character work that leads Lloyd up to the big moment. The other great silent comics defined their own worlds; Lloyd lives dangerously in ours.” — Dave Kehr, Chicago Reader

Harold Lloyd was silent comedy’s daredevil, cannily disguised as an average guy. In the 20s he was more popular than Buster Keaton and in more films than Charlie Chaplin. Though he made a pair of horn-rimmed glasses and a nerdy squint his trademark, he was as physically agile and as daring a movie actor as ever lived. In this most famous of his films he’s a country boy determined to get ahead in the big smoke. Sending letters to his girl back home overstating his progress, to put it mildly, he’s cornered into daredevil mode when she pays a surprise visit, and must scale a 12-storey building.

Safety Last!, with its department store setting and skyscraper-climbing antics, is as up-to-date a dispatch from 1923 as you will ever find, its zeitgeist jazzily accentuated by Carl Davis’ score. The great care that Lloyd, and now his granddaughter Suzanne, have always taken with his film legacy help accentuate that freshness even further: in its recently created digital form, the film looks as good as new.

Marc Taddei conducts the scores for both films. A popular guest conductor throughout Australasia, Marc is currently Music Director of Orchestra Wellington and the Vallejo Symphony in California. His many Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra Live Cinema engagements have included an exhilarating The Wind in 2006, an eerily romantic Nosferatu in 2011 and Carl Davis’ orchestration of Chaplin’s score for The Kid last year.

Music for silent films has been an enduring strand of the prolific Carl Davis’ activities. His 1980 score for Abel Gance’s Napoleon triggered an extraordinary revival of interest in silent film, and Davis’ oeuvre of more than 50 scores for this medium, including Flesh and the DevilBen-HurThe Thief of BaghdadGreed, Intolerance and The General, has brought him international acclaim.

Composer Neil Brand has been accompanying silent films for over 20 years. He has written scores for TV documentaries and radio dramas; music for theatre; two musicals and four radio plays; and is considered one of the finest exponents of improvised silent film accompaniment in the world. He has dazzled New Zealand audiences several times as a guest of NZIFF. Neil’s score for Easy Street has been arranged for orchestra by another NZIFF Live Cinema regular, composer and conductor Timothy Brock.