British Comedy Guide
Please donate to help support British comedy at all levels. Thank you. Find out more

Walter Wants Work (1922)

Short silent (of course) from the director, writer AND star (!) Walter Forde, and it seems a number of these were made. Forde also directed "The Ghost Train" which was written by Arnold Ridley (Dad's Army's Godfrey).

Sadly not a match on suchlike coming out of Hollywood at that time, but interesting - I'd loved to know where the street scenes were filmed, but Reelstreets couldn't come up with an answer, which is not surprising.

Worth a watch if only for curiosity's sake, as under half hour long.

Quote: Hercules Grytpype Thynne @ 16th August 2020, 6:16 AM

Sadly not a match on suchlike coming out of Hollywood at that time.

Could this not be said about any British film at any time? Try comparing it with other British flicks?

Quote: Paul Wimsett @ 16th August 2020, 2:47 PM

Could this not be said about any British film at any time? Try comparing it with other British flicks?

Not at all, some of the murder/thriller/drama/mystery films were as good, if not better than what the Yanks were putting out, and there's not many "British flicks" of that period to compare with, plus I am only reviewing what I see on TPTV.

If you want to come up to recent times, just look how much the Yanks f**ked up the likes of "The Ladykillers" - a British film that was absolutely brilliant, but of course "they" thought they could remake it better , and failed

Share this page