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IMDbPro

Ausgerechnet Wolkenkratzer oder der Luftikus

Originaltitel: Safety Last!
  • 1923
  • Not Rated
  • 1 Std. 14 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,1/10
24.125
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Harold Lloyd in Ausgerechnet Wolkenkratzer oder der Luftikus (1923)
FarceRomantic ComedySlapstickActionComedyRomanceThriller

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA boy leaves his small country town and heads to the big city to get a job. As soon as he makes it big his sweetheart will join him and marry him. His enthusiasm to get ahead leads to some i... Alles lesenA boy leaves his small country town and heads to the big city to get a job. As soon as he makes it big his sweetheart will join him and marry him. His enthusiasm to get ahead leads to some interesting adventures.A boy leaves his small country town and heads to the big city to get a job. As soon as he makes it big his sweetheart will join him and marry him. His enthusiasm to get ahead leads to some interesting adventures.

  • Regie
    • Fred C. Newmeyer
    • Sam Taylor
  • Drehbuch
    • Hal Roach
    • Sam Taylor
    • Tim Whelan
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Harold Lloyd
    • Mildred Davis
    • Bill Strother
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    8,1/10
    24.125
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Fred C. Newmeyer
      • Sam Taylor
    • Drehbuch
      • Hal Roach
      • Sam Taylor
      • Tim Whelan
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Harold Lloyd
      • Mildred Davis
      • Bill Strother
    • 130Benutzerrezensionen
    • 93Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 4 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Fotos127

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    Topbesetzung37

    Ändern
    Harold Lloyd
    Harold Lloyd
    • Harold - The Boy
    Mildred Davis
    Mildred Davis
    • Mildred - The Girl
    Bill Strother
    Bill Strother
    • Limpy Bill - The Pal
    Noah Young
    Noah Young
    • Officer Jim Taylor - The Law
    Westcott Clarke
    Westcott Clarke
    • Mr. Stubbs, head floorwalker
    • (as Westcott B. Clarke)
    Chester A. Bachman
    Chester A. Bachman
    • Friendly Cop
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Ed Brandenburg
    • Man in Straw Boater Hat
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Roy Brooks
    Roy Brooks
    • Man Laughing from Window
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Charley Chase
    Charley Chase
    • Bystander at Climbing
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Monte Collins
    Monte Collins
    • Laundry Truck Driver
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Mickey Daniels
    Mickey Daniels
    • Newsboy with Freckles
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Richard Daniels
    • Worker with Acetylene Torch
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Ray Erlenborn
    Ray Erlenborn
    • Newsboy with Cap
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Ruth Feldman
    • Customer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    William Gillespie
    William Gillespie
    • General Manager's Assistant
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Helen Gilmore
    Helen Gilmore
    • Department Store Customer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Katherine Grant
    Katherine Grant
    • Blonde Woman at Window
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Wally Howe
    Wally Howe
    • Man with Flowers
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • …
    • Regie
      • Fred C. Newmeyer
      • Sam Taylor
    • Drehbuch
      • Hal Roach
      • Sam Taylor
      • Tim Whelan
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen130

    8,124.1K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    9claudio_carvalho

    One of the Funniest Comedies Ever

    In 1922, the country boy Harold says goodbye to his mother and his girlfriend Mildred in the train station and leaves Great Bend expecting to be successful in the big city. Harold promises to Mildred to get married with her as soon as he "make good".

    Harold shares a room with his friend "Limpy" Bill and he finally gets a job as salesman in the De Vore Department Store. However, he pawns Bill's phonograph, buys a lavaliere and writes to Mildred telling that he is a manager of De Vore.

    One day, Harold sees an old friend from Great Bend that is a policeman and when he meets his friend Bill, he asks Bill to push the policeman over him and make him fall down. However Bill pushes the wrong policeman that chases him, but he escapes climbing up a building.

    Out of the blue, Mildred is convinced by her mother to visit Harold without previous notice and he pretends to be the manager of De Vore. When Harold overhears the general manager telling that he would give one thousand dollars to to anyone that could promote De Vore attracting people to the department store, he offers five hundred dollars to Bill to climb up the Bolton Building. However things go wrong when the angry policeman decides to check whether the mystery man that will climb up the building is the one who pushed him over on the floor.

    "Safety Last!" is one of the funniest comedies ever and the joke begins with the title that plays with the expression Safety First! Another day I saw "Hugo" and Martin Scorcese pays a tribute to "Safety Last!" showing the scene of Harold Lloyd hanging from the Bolton Building clock and I have decided to see this film again.

    If Harold Lloyd himself or a stuntman climbed the building, it does not matter. The breathless scene is among the most known in the cinema history and "Safety Last!" is a must-see film for any generation. My vote is nine.

    Title (Brazil): "O Homem Mosca" ("The Fly Man")
    10zetes

    Never before have I heard an audience react so much to a film

    Safety Last was funny pretty much throughout its entirety. The scene where Harold and his roommate hide in their coats (you'd have to see it to know what I'm talking about) got an enormous laugh which lasted for a long time, followed by some applause. I remember that there was a slow section, lasting about 5 minutes, after Harold's fiancee arrived in the city, but other than that, this film was consistently hilarious.

    And then during the building climbing scene, there were so many laughs and gasps, applause, and shouts ("OH MY GOD!") coming from the audience. It was probably the single most hair-raising scene that I or most of the other people in the theater had ever seen. And the climb, which lasts, I believe, 12 stories, should have gotten old. But it never came close to getting old. Each joke was masterful.

    After having seen the film, I was unfairly comparing it to the silent film that I had seen the previous week at a theater with live piano: Buster Keaton's Sherlock Jr. Well, nothing is really comparable to that film. I consider it the funniest film I've ever seen. I was planning to give Safety Last a 9/10, but after some thought, I realized that I laughed a lot harder and more at this film than 90% of the other comedies I've seen. At least 90%, but probably much more. I have to give this a 10/10. This film really should be on DVD, or at least VHS. Harold Lloyd shouldn't be as forgotten as he is.
    9AlsExGal

    Truly the best of 1923 IMHO

    Harold Lloyd is "The Boy" who travels to the big city to "make good" so he can send for his girl (Mildred Davis as Mildred) and marry her. But Harold is just a lowly clerk at a department store. He does without meals and even has to dodge the landlady so that he can buy expensive jewelry and send it back home to Mildred and make her think he is a success until he can find some real achievement. But the ruse backfires when Mildred's mother convinces her that it is dangerous for a young man to have so much money in the big city and also be alone. Thus she shows up unannounced at the department store one day and Harold has to convince her that he is someone of importance AND not get fired in the process. Complications ensue.

    Harold Lloyd, one of the three great silent comics along with Chaplin and Keaton, carved out a niche that was distinct from the others in that he was always working from within the system where Chaplin and Keaton were either outcasts or rebels. Here he shows that success is possible and laudable, but it is often done in small and even reluctant steps. My favorite scene isn't the long one where he climbs the side of the building. Instead my favorite is where Harold shows Mildred around the office of the store's general manager - she believes that is who he is - and manages to sidestep every potentially catastrophic situation with great ingenuity.

    Something that others may or may not appreciate but that I always enjoyed is that, since much of this is taking place in a 1920s department store, there is a real opportunity to see the advertised high fashions of the day versus what average people are wearing. And also there is perhaps a goof shown. When Lloyd does his famous climb up the side of a building you can clearly see another tall building with a sign saying "Blackstone's - California's Finest Store". There really was such a building, in Los Angeles. Though the film never says what big city Harold has traveled to in order to seek his fortune, his character is supposed to be from Indiana. That would be quite a trip in 1923 when Chicago is much closer. Just something weird that I happened to notice.

    If you are just getting familiar with Lloyd I'd start with this one. It really demonstrates everything he was good at.
    9rmax304823

    Without a Net

    One of the best contructed full-length comedies of the twenties. Harold Lloyd was not as outrageously inventive as Chaplin, nor as sentimental. His style was a kind of minimalist one, taking a simple idea -- say, being a hasseled salesman in a clothing store and needing desperately to become a success -- and building on that small situation until, by the hilarious climax, he finds himself swinging from the bent minute hand of an oversized clock on the side of a building many stories above the street. (Human flies were popular around this time, as were flagpole sitters and goldfish eaters.) When a mouse crawls up the leg of his trousers, not only does Loyd go through a sort of break dance trying to get rid of it but when he finally does shake it out, the mouse falls down the wall of the building and in the process removes a toupee from a spectator peering out of a lower window. All of this without matte work. Not to say that the earlier scenes in the store aren't extremely amusing, because they are. Loyd had a very mobile face and like most silent comedians a deft physical manner. He makes a splendidly fawning salesman. A very funny movie indeed, and thrilling as well. Any five minutes of the climax, taken at random, makes one dizzier than whole sections of Clint Eastwood or Sylvester Stallone hanging around the Eiger or elsewhere in the Alps. Somehow, Loyd managed to make a self-deprecatory joke out of his athletic skill, while nowadays stars use what amount of it they have as an opportunity to show off their bravery and, when possible, their bulging muscles. Let's hear it for the silents.
    9gbrumburgh

    Harold's ultimate thrill feature...his memorable 'clock-dangling' sequence shows comedy time-ing at its very best!

    Wiry, athletic, bespectacled Harold Lloyd may rank third after Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton in "silent age" comedy polls, but when it comes to perilous, pulse-racing, gravity-defying stuntwork, he's the "King of the World!"

    The aptly-titled "Safety Last" is without a doubt Lloyd's signature film. The indelible still taken of Harold dangling from the minute-hand of that Big Ben-looking clock is definitive silent screen imagery. A shame too for it is only one classic moment from a tireless legacy of work that is too often overlooked.

    Isn't it amazing that despite knowing the outcome of this movie, knowing that Lloyd survived all these crazy stunts, your heart still skips a beat every time he scales that 12-story building, floor by floor, encountering every obstacle imaginable...or unimaginable? Those pesky pigeons, the mouse, the flagpole, the painters, the rope, the mad dog and, of course, the clock. What adds to the intrigue is knowing he did his own stunts, that he had lost fingers prior to this filming in another movie mishap, that there were no safety nets underneath, and that there was no trick photography used. I say Harold deserves a more prominent place in movie history, suffering for his art as no other artist has.

    The plot leading up to his daredevil antics is fairly pat but sprayed throughout with inventive sight gags. Harold plays your simple, hapless, small-town 'everyman' who goes to the BIG city to seek fame and fortune, leaving his true love (played by Mildred Davis, his real-life wife) at home until he's makes it. Fresh off the bus, he eventually manages to scrape up a job as a clerk in a department store, a job that takes him nowhere fast. To save face, he keeps sending expensive trinkets back home that indicate otherwise. Convinced that he has indeed made it, she heads off to the BIG city to join him, much to his chagrin. Desperate to earn quick cash before she discovers the truth, he takes his boss up on an offer and works up a publicity ruse to drum up sales for the store.

    The rest is classic Lloyd. Wearing his trademark straw hat and horn-rimmed glasses, the meek mouse suddenly turns into Mighty Mouse as our boy, through a series of mishaps, literally moves up in the world, scaling heights even he never dreamed of!

    All's well, of course, that ends well, as we've been saying for centuries. Sure, we know how things ended back in the good ol' days, but isn't it great to know that when Harold got the girl, he STAYED with the girl? In real life, Harold and Mildred remained sweethearts for over 45 years.

    Highly recommended for those who want to see more of this genius's amazing work is "Kid Brother" and "The Freshman." For me, this guy still provides one heck of an "E" ticket rollercoaster ride.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Harold Lloyd first tested the safety precautions for the clock stunt by dropping a dummy onto the mattress below. The dummy bounced off and plummeted to the street below.
    • Patzer
      When The Boy receives his paycheck from the store employee and opens it, his pay stub has the name "Harold Lloyd" on it. While this is the name of the actor, it is not supposed to be the name of the character. The character, as in most of his films, is known only as The Boy. This is the only incident in Harold Lloyd's film career in which he plays a character using his true name. The scene was edited in without Lloyd's knowledge, and he didn't become aware of it until the movie was complete.
    • Zitate

      Old Lady With Flower Hat: Young man, don't you know you might fall and get hurt?

    • Alternative Versionen
      In 1990, The Harold Lloyd Trust and Photoplay Productions presented a 73-minute version of this film in association with Thames Television International, with a musical score written by Carl Davis. The addition of modern credits stretched the time to 74 minutes.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into The Clock (2010)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 1. Mai 1924 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Sicherheit spielt keine Rolle
    • Drehorte
      • Atlantic Hotel, Broadway, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(facade, clock tower scene)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Hal Roach Studios
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 121.000 $ (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 14 Minuten
    • Sound-Mix
      • Silent
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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