Film Review
Max in a Taxi was the last of
three comedy shorts which the great silent film comedian Max Linder
made for the Essanay Film Manufacturing Company, the American studio
that had previously employed Charlie Chaplin. Linder's previous
two films for Essanay -
Max Comes
Across and
Max Wants a Divorce - had both
been commercial and critical failures but his third film proved to be
moderately successful. Unfortunately, Linder had by this stage
failed to convince his producer George K. Spoor that he was a sound
business proposition and so his contract was terminated and he returned
to France.
Of the six films that Linder made in America,
Max in a Taxi is arguably the one
where the comedian most successfully rekindles the spontaneity and
exuberance of his early French films. The film begins with a
classic Max gag - our hero attaches a horse the wrong-way-round to his
carriage, so that the horse must walk down the highway backwards.
In the next scene, Max (under the influence of strong liquor) insists
on walking up a flight of stairs backwards, and proceeds to tumble out
of an upstairs window, a stunt worthy of Buster Keaton. Fallen on
hard times, Max makes various attempts to kill himself (presaging the
comedian's real-life suicide eight years later), before deciding to
take a job as a taxi driver, with predictably disastrous results.
After a series of fairly mundane gags (many of which fail to achieve
their full comic potential), the film concludes in a hilarious vein,
with Max dangling helplessly from a set of telegraph wires - an apt
metaphor for his futile attempts to find his feet in
America.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Max Linder film:
Seven Years Bad Luck (1921)
Film Synopsis
When he returns home drunk, Max is thrown onto the street by his
outraged father. Homeless and hungry, Max decides to kill himself
by lying on a railway track and waiting for a train to run him
over. The train takes an adjacent line, so Max decides to hang
himself instead. This likewise fails, but he comes across an
invitation to a society dance. He gatecrashes the dance and helps
himself to the viands provided for the dancers, before catching the eye
of an attractive young woman, who invites him to dance with her.
Later, seeing an advertisement in the paper, Max decides to apply for a
job as a taxi driver. He has never driven a car before, but he
doesn't see why that should cause a problem...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.