The Show-Off (1926)
There's More Here Than Louise Brooks & Clara Bow.
14 May 2024
Warning: Spoilers
It would appear that the 2000 Image DVD and the Amazon streams of these two titles are currently not available which is unfortunate as both movies have more to offer than simply Louise Brooks and Clara Bow. Both films are middle-of-the-road Paramount releases from the mid-1920s and are great examples of the type of everyday fare available to the audiences of that time. Both movies were directed by solid studio craftsmen who held no pretensions of creating high art, Malcolm St. Clair who would later work with Laurel & Hardy, and Wesley Ruggles (brother of character actor Charlie Ruggles) who went on to direct the Oscar winning adaptation of Edna Ferber's CIMMARON in 1931.

THE SHOW OFF was made in 1926 as a rare starring vehicle for Ford Sterling. Sterling began his career as a circus clown before drifting into movies around 1912. He is best remembered today as the harried Police Chief of the Keystone Kops. In this movie he plays an obnoxious braggart who, after nearly destroying his in-laws' lives, is given one last chance to prove himself. This was Louise Brooks' second supporting part for Paramount after IT'S THE OLD ARMY GAME with W. C. Fields. The plot hinges on her key scene with Sterling that leads to his redemption. An added bonus is the location shooting in Philadelphia showing the city as it was at that time. In his characterization, Sterling looks and comes across as a silent film version of Dan Ackroyd.

THE PLASTIC AGE dates from 1925 and was based on a best selling book about college students. As such it provides a fascinating time capsule of campus life back then. While the settings and fashions have certainly changed, the "party hearty' attitude of young people away from home has not. This was the role that landed Clara Bow her contract at Paramount where she would go on to make 19 films before the advent of sound in 1929. She naturally plays a party girl who diverts a Freshman athlete (Donald Keith) from his studies which nearly leads to his ruin. Also on hand are D. W. Griffith regulars Mary Alden and Henry B. Walthal as the concerned parents. A young, easily recognizable Clark Gable can be spotted as an extra in the locker room scenes.

The quality of the two prints utilized for this release could not be more different. THE SHOW OFF is in excellent condition, having been taken from an original 35mm print. THE PLASTIC AGE comes from a worn 16mm print that was originally part of the Killiam Collection. The Killiam Collection pioneered silent film preservation back in the 1960s. The movie follows the standard pattern of tinting day scenes sepia while night scenes are tinted blue. While it suffers in comparison to THE SHOW OFF, THE PLASTIC AGE is more than watchable and it preserves a quintessential Clara Bow performance. The idea of combining Louise Brooks and Clara Bow on a DVD double feature was inspired. Hopefully these movies will return to circulation soon...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
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