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*Frank Capra's THE STRONG MAN 1926 Harry Langdon Silent Comedy Jumbo Lobby Card

$ 132

Availability: 99 in stock
  • Year of Release: 1926
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Actors: Harry Langdon, Arthur Thalasso
  • Item: Vintage original 14 x 17 jumbo lobby card
  • Studio: First National Pictures
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Year: Pre-1940
  • Country: United States
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Condition: Unrestored in fine- condition as described below
  • Director: Frank Capra
  • Film Title: The Strong Man
  • Modified Item: Yes
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Modification Description: Has two hole punches along the left margin

    Description

    Vintage original 14 x 17 in. (35 x 43 cm.) jumbo lobby card
    from the classic silent film comedy,
    THE STRONG MAN
    , released in 1926 by First National
    Pictures
    and
    directed by Frank Capra
    .
    Paul Bergot (Harry Langdon) is a Belgian emigrant to the United States who has fallen in love with Mary Brown (Priscilla Bonner), a blind woman. They met as pen-pals when he was fighting in Europe during World War I. Mary even sent Paul a photo of herself.
    Paul searches for Mary by asking every woman he meets if she is Mary Brown. By accident he rescues her town from crooks and bootleggers.
    The image features a sepia-tinted interior shot of Paul Bergot (
    Harry Langdon
    ) seated in a large crowd as he rests his against the shoulder of Zandow the Great (
    Arthur Thalasso
    ) who sits without any reaction. It is unrestored in fine- condition with two hole punches along the left margin; corner creases of varying sizes with random creases along some of the margins; and a few small tears on the top and bottom margins.
    The Strong Man
    is a 1926 American comedy silent film starring Harry Langdon and
    directed by Frank Capra in his feature-length directorial debut
    . Along with
    Tramp, Tramp, Tramp
    ,
    The Strong Man
    is Langdon's best known film. Capra would also direct Langdon's next feature,
    Long Pants
    (1927), which would be their final collaboration.
    The staff at
    Variety
    magazine liked the film and wrote, "A whale of a comedy production that has a wealth of slapstick, a rough-and-tumble finish and in the earlier passages bits of pantomimic comedy that are notable. Harry Langdon has a comic method distinct from other film fun makers. The quality of pathos enters into it more fully than the style of any other comedian with the possible exception of Chaplin. His gift of legitimate comedy here has a splendid vehicle."
    More recently, critic Maria Schneider reviewed Langdon's work and wrote, "Not surprisingly, Langdon was most often cast as an oblivious innocent adrift in a corrupt world, a formula that made him terrifically popular in the mid-1920s. Of the three features Kino has released,
    The Strong Man
    (1926) is the best...Crisply timed and almost perfectly paced, it is also notable as Frank Capra's directorial debut."
    Critic Richard von Busack wrote, "A little tragedy and a lot of laughs can be seen in 1926's
    The Strong Man
    ... Later, on the crowded bus out west, Langdon demonstrates a sterling silent comedy bit: the one about the goof who mistakes a jar of stenchy Limburger cheese for Vicks' VapoRub. With exquisite deadpan, Langdon keeps the incident from being too sad; he deftly, repeatedly, sucker-punches a bully who protests against the smell. Director Frank Capra's energy and sturdy plot sense counterpoint Langdon's wonderful strangeness."
    Reviewing Langdon's career and movies, silent film critic and author Dan Navarro wrote, "When Harry Langdon's
    Tramp, Tramp
    , Tramp premiered in March 1926, it was greeted by moviegoers as a worthy challenger to the great films of Charles Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd. Langdon was hailed as 'the fourth comedy genius.' That heady feeling was reinforced when, in September 1926, Langdon appeared in an even better picture, Frank Capra's
    The Strong Man
    ...[the film] was Frank Capra's first directorial effort, and his genius shines through.