One Week was added to the Library of Congress' National Film Registry in 2008, and it darn well deserves it. This is the way to start a solo movie career.
The movie begins with an astonishing scene in which Buster and his new bride (Sybil Seely) move themselves from one moving car to another in order to avoid the advances of Hank the chauffeur (who just happens to be Mrs. Buster's ex-boyfriend). The scene works like a cinematic Moebius strip, as the couple exits the second moving car, conks a cop on the head so that the traffic will allow the first moving car to advance in their direction, frames Hank for the cop-bopping, and then re-enter the first car as if nothing had happened. And this is a throwaway gag. Never mind Keaton's superlative physical gifts; a director (Keaton co-directed with Eddie Cline) who starts off a movie that spectacularly has nerves of steel.
The crux of the story is the couple's attempt to put together a do-it-yourself house from a kit they received as a wedding gift from Buster's uncle. We already have misgivings when we see Buster saw off the end of a beam on which he'd been sitting, one story above the ground. Then jealous Hank sneaks in and sabotages the kit, and from then on, it's quite clear that Buster would have been better off if his uncle had just bought him a toaster.
The biggest and funniest sight gag is the completed, deformed house, which endlessly produces gags like a slot machine spewing out coins. One can imagine Keaton viewing a house from all angles like a prism, uncovering every building-a-house gag imaginable. (In some of the set-ups and in Keaton's spectacular stunts, one can also see the genesis of the wild climax of Keaton's final independent movie, Steamboat Bill Jr.)
Praise should also be given to Sybil Seely who, as Buster's bride, makes the first of five appearances with Keaton. Most of the Keaton canon is not very complimentary to women (perhaps reflecting Keaton's contentiousness with "real" women in the 1920's and '30s). By contrast, Seely is sunny and holds her own with Keaton here. When Buster is baffled by the house's awkward construction, or when a raging storm turns the house into a frantic merry-go-round, Seely truly seems a partner with Buster, trying to help him or sharing in his sorrows. She grounds the movie in domestic bliss, which makes the more farcical elements that much more plausible. (There's also a funny non sequitor where a naked Seely is about to step out of a bathtub, when suddenly an anonymous hand helpfully covers the camera lens to help Seely avoid embarrassing herself. Keaton would probably have called this "directorial commentary.")
In a New Yorker article celebrating the centennial of Keaton's birth, critic Anthony Lane gave up all pretense to modesty and called One Week "a strong candidate for the perfect short subject." I'm not prone to such superlatives, but every time I watch the movie, I'm less and less inclined to disagree with Lane.
(Click here to visit "90 Years and One Week," our Facebook page devoted to this glorious short subject.)
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