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Sunday, Jul 23, 1995
Steamboat Bill, Jr.
The authentic Mississippi River setting (filmed along the Sacramento River delta) is but one of Steamboat Bill, Jr.'s many pleasures. The film seems to have a direct line to Keaton's youth and soul in the tale of a sensitive, effeminate lad trying to figure out the mettle of manhood in his overbearing dad. Buster with an umbrella against the fearsome storm that rips the houses off people's lives; Buster drawn, as if in a dream, to an abandoned vaudeville theater: "Keaton's most entertaining balance of the instinctual and the cerebral" (Sarris & Allen, The Village Voice). The climax is one of Keaton's most dangerous and carefully planned stunts: Noting that the hospital in which he lies, and indeed the whole town, has flown away, he runs to stand in the street. A wall comes crashing down on him but he passes, untouched, through an open window. Keaton was the true he-man among matinee idols-the scene was done unfaked, with a real wall.
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