Put on Mighty Like a Moose . And prepare to meet your new favorite comedian.
Stop searching for the "deep cut." Stop pretending you’ve seen every Keaton short. Charley Chase MegaPack
In the golden age of silent and early sound comedy, a few names dominate the conversation: Chaplin, Keaton, Lloyd, and later, Laurel & Hardy. But lurking just beneath that A-list is a man who might have been the most consistently hilarious of them all. His name is Charley Chase. Put on Mighty Like a Moose
A silent film with a frantic pace. Chase is trying to get to his wedding, but his future mother-in-law’s limousine keeps getting stripped of parts by strangers. The final freeze-frame of Chase screaming silently into the camera is the stuff of comedy legend. In the golden age of silent and early
In an era of "elevated horror" and "prestige drama," the Charley Chase MegaPack is a reminder that pure, physical, plot-driven comedy is an art form. Chase is the comedian your favorite comedian’s favorite comedian. Groucho Marx admired him. Jerry Lewis copied his rhythm. Mel Brooks quotes his gags.
Chase transitioned to talkies better than most. His voice—a smooth, slightly panicked tenor—became his weapon. In this short, he invents a fake, exotic backstory to impress a girl, only to have her father actually be from that exotic place. The rapid-fire linguistic gymnastics are a joy to hear.
If you love perfectly tailored suits, double-takes that defy physics, and plots that spiral from "minor misunderstanding" into "absolute urban warfare," you need this collection. Born Charles Parrott in Baltimore in 1893, Chase was a triple-threat: director, writer, and star. While his contemporaries played tramps (Chaplin), stone-faces (Keaton), or go-getters (Lloyd), Chase played the everyday man —specifically, the everyday man who has just accidentally set his mother-in-law’s hat on fire while trying to impress a girl.