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5/10
What it lacks in comedy it makes up in being loud!
planktonrules18 July 2018
This short from Educational Pictures is interesting because it pairs Andy Clyde with Vernon Dent. Just a few years later, both would leave for Columbia where they made a ton of shorts together and separately.

When the story begins, 'Sunshine' (Andy Clyde) is hitching a ride. Little does he know that that driver (Dent) is suicidal and planning on ending it all in the car! Fortunately, Sunshine talks him into not killing himself...and soon you learn that the man's frustration with a painting and a pain in the neck client have driven him to suicide...and soon Andy understands why.

Luis Alberni plays the obnoxious client...and he plays him with all the subtlety as a stripper at a Baptist Church picnic! In other words, we grossly overacts...which is NOT unusual for Alberni. Some of it is funny, some is not...but at least you can't say the film doesn't have a lot of energy!
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6/10
Just Before the Deluge
boblipton9 February 2010
A very late comedy short for Mack Sennett starring the inimitable Andy Clyde, with Vernon Dent as second banana, just before Sennett's studio imploded in large part due to forces beyond his control. It's long on action and gags and short on logic.

Dent is an artist who picks up Andy Clyde on the road and is incidentally saved by him. Under the direction of long-time Sennett regular Harry Edwards, the short is full of strongly timed gag shots, but little subtlety -- although Clyde was a brilliant comic performer who somehow managed to flourish quietly for a quarter of a century in Jules White's employ at Columbia, he never seemed to rise much above a utility player at Sennett, even when he was the nominal lead.

The best role in this movie belongs to Luis Alberni, remembered these days for playing excitable Italians in Preston Sturges' stock company. Here he plays a maniac who who destroys Dent's works of art while convinced that Clyde is the genius who made them. The result is a decent if not great comedy.
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5/10
Thumbs up to an artistic pick-up.
mark.waltz30 August 2018
Warning: Spoilers
It's Andy Clyde here, getting a lift into society that he won't soon forget. Temperamental artist Vernon Dent offers Clyde a lift in exchange for filling in for him when the husband (fiery Luis Alberni) of a girlfriend of his expressed interest in Dent's artwork. With the help of a mischievous spider monkey, Clyde tries to create a sale, but creates a mess that results in the supposed painting revealing its flaws. Some of the moments are truly hysterical, with the monkey arranging for the painting to literally peel itself off (and do a hoochy koochy) as the subject of the painting looks on in horror. A late work of Mack Sennett's, this is moderately enjoyable but certainly no classic.
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