The Bluffer (1930) Poster

(1930)

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3/10
A Fake Comedy
boblipton22 July 2010
Something happened to Mack Sennett's staff during the sound era: they lost that sure sense of pacing of gags, thrills and story that they had during the silent era, from the earliest, plot-free Keystones onward. For some people sound added a dimension. For Sennett, who plunged headlong into the new medium -- he even set up his own color lab at the studio and did shorts in Sennett Color, a variation of two-strip Technicolor -- integrating sound into the equation was a problem and his sound shorts were hit-or-miss, working best with performers who could interpolate their voices and personalities into the spaces -- W.C. Fields' asides, Bing Crosby's songs, Andy Clyde's chuckles -- which didn't stop him from making others and the disastrous feature HYPNOTIZED.

In addition this is one of Sennett's plots from the days he was at Biograph: two young men are courting Andy Clyde's daughter. She wants to marry one, her father insists on the other. And while Andy Clyde can read dialogue, when he's holding a conversation with someone who can't, it sounds awful.

Since most of the short takes place in a rowboat on the ocean, even the color doesn't work here, since it's hard to show the blue of sky and sea when your color palette is red and green. But that's really the only reason to see this movie, to see what two-strip Sennett Color looked like.

Or you could skip the whole thing.
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3/10
Perhaps the color film stock was so expensive that they couldn't afford writers!
planktonrules21 June 2022
"The Bluffer" is a bad comedy that inexplicably was filmed in color. Color was a very unusual and expensive process in 1930 and I have no idea why they chose this film for such treatment. This is because the film really isn't funny....a major problem when it's supposed to be a comedy.

The story begins badly, with Pop (Andy Clyde) on the beach and accidently sitting on a potted cactus. Now WHY would a potted cactus be on the beach?! This makes no sense...nor does what follows. Soon two men come to Pop and want to marry his daughter. One claims to be incredibly brave but he's full of hot air. So, the daughter and the other man work together to expose the fake during a fishing trip with Pop.

Obviously fake swordfish (even a child of two would have realized it was fake), cacti where it never should have been AND an illogical ending (they are afraid of the fish in the water....so they jump into the water!!) make this a very tough film to like.
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