Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Há 5 dias · Buster Keaton: Home tells the story of Busters early life on the road as a child vaudeville star and how he found his home along the shores of Lake Michigan. Born into a vaudeville family in 1895, Buster joined the act at the age of five and instantly became a star and the driving force behind the family act.

  2. Há 3 dias · Battling Butler is a classic silent film directed by the legendary Buster Keaton. Released in 1926, this comedy-drama tells the story of a wealthy young man named Alfred Butler who tries to impress the girl he loves by pretending to be a professional boxer.

  3. Há 5 dias · My humble tribute to one of my favorite comedic actors of Silent Film.Slideshow and music created by Marin Gale.

    • 2 min
    • 2
    • Marin Gale
  4. Há 2 dias · Wittgenstein And Buster Keaton. Robert Goff at Lawrence Weschler’s Wondercabinet: Now we may return briefly to the philosophy of Wittgenstein. If this seems a radical change of subject, an abrupt passage from the familiarity of comedy to the strangeness of technical philosophy, then it may be hoped that such an experience of difference may ...

  5. Há 2 dias · Check out my new YouTube video Caught On Film – Buster Keaton’s The Cameraman. Not just the locations, moving to M-G-M, and Buster’s rented bungalow right outside, but hidden details reveal how filming at long-familiar locales, and near where he had once worked happily with mentor/best friend Roscoe Arbuckle, must have given Keaton some comfort during this difficult transition in life.

  6. Há 5 dias · GoldenFlickLounge. 26.1K subscribers. Subscribed. 0. No views 1 minute ago. Hard Luck is a 1921 American two-reel silent comedy film starring Buster Keaton, written and directed by Keaton and...

    • 22 min
    • GoldenFlickLounge
  7. Há 3 dias · Meanwhile, as Thalberg sneezed and made classic films, over at Comique Film Corporation, great “art” was being made by “BusterKeaton in deals cut by Joseph M. Schenck (1876-1961), older brother of Nick (1880-1969), whom Loew kept in New York, given bad blood with Mayer who called him the “skunk.”