One a Minute (1921) Poster

(1921)

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6/10
Placebo Effect
boblipton26 January 2020
Douglas MacLean returns to his home town in Iowa, to take over the drug store his late father ran. Times are changing, and the store hasn't. There's a new chain drug store opening right across the street from his, owned by the father of the girl he loves, Marian de Beck. To compete, he recalls his father had spent decades trying to compound a panacea. Grinding together ginger, charcoal, Fuller's Earth and pepsin, he announces his great discovery just before the chain drug store opens. So great is the power of suggestion, that no symptom seems proof against this quack nostrum. It's a funny, quick silent comedy.

Douglas MacLean was a light leading comic, first for Ince, then releasing his own productions through Paramount. Like most of the light comedians of the era, Doug played an ordinary man, whose behavior was just a bit odd; in this one, MacLean's thoughts seem to linger a bit too long, leaving him to rush to catch up to whatever problem he faces at the moment. In dress and behavior, he seems much like Douglas Fairbanks at this stage of his career, if definitely more cynical.

MacLean continued his career starring as the young go-getter in his own productions, through the end of the silent era. Then, facing the fact that he had aged out of the role at 40, he switched to writing and producing comedies for other performers through the early 1940s. He would die in 1967, aged 77.

Like many a skilled and interesting star of the silent era, MacLean has fallen out of the consciousness not just of the public, but of the film buff. Happily, Ben Model, working with the Library of Congress has just issued this movie and MacLean's BELL BOY 13 on dvd, with one of his happy scores.
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A Superb Examination of Small Business Versus the Chain Store, Still Relevant Today
briantaves16 October 2011
Warning: Spoilers
The most complex of star Douglas MacLean's films for producer Thomas Ince is One a Minute, depicting changes in American retailing in a sophisticated satire of American business. It is set literally in middle America: Centerville, shown on the map as a short distance from Des Moines. Douglas MacLean, as Jimmy Knight, inherits his father's drug store, losing customers to the newly-opened competitor, R&H. As noted in an intertitle, it is "The modern 'Trust' store that promises to cure the fanciest ailments—on a cut rate basis." The inexpensive chain store overwhelming a "mom-and-pop" small business is a situation no less relevant today.

However, One a Minute is not a socially conscious observation of business practices, and the background is subsumed into outright comedy. MacLean is far more expressive than in most of his roles, as a go-getter; Lincoln may be Knight's idol, but he is hardly a "knight in shining armor," instead following the motto of Barnum recalled by the movie's title.

To impress a girl who turns out to be the daughter of the owner of R&H, Knight rejects a generous buy-out. The only way to compete with the bigger store is to offer a product they cannot. He then concocts the fabled panacea his father had spent a lifetime trying to create by simply combining the worst-tasting ingredients, from ginger to fuller's earth. The press is happy to publicize the "discovery," and the first to try it find themselves revitalized. But Knight does not stop there; he demands to be named mayor in order to locate his factory locally, and when placed on trial for violating the Pure Food and Drug Act, wins the case by curing the dyspeptic judge. Finally R&H pay him $1.5 million to reveal the secret fifth ingredient. It is, says Knight, faith—but not the faith of Christian Science, simply the will to believe. Indeed, One a Minute has gone so far into make-believe that a final intertitle pictures the stork's delivery of a baby to Knight and his soon-to-be-wife.

One a Minute was probably the highlight of Ince's films for producer Thomas Ince for Paramount release, as outlined in my Ince biography. Based on a 1918 play by Fred Jackson, One a Minute offers both farce but also very clear parallels with economic tensions. Although the implications may be inescapable, they are left at the side for the viewer to consider after the comedy is delivered. One a Minute cost $78,301 to produce, and grossed $199,795.
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