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Safety Last! Safety Last! is a 1923 American silent romantic-comedy film starring Harold Lloyd. It includes one of the most famous images from the silent-film era: Lloyd clutching the hands of a large clock as he dangles from the outside of a skyscraper above moving traffic. The film was highly successful and critically hailed, and it cemented ...
Safety Last! Usage on eu.wikipedia.org Safety Last! Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Monte là-dessus ! Usage on sv.wikipedia.org Wikipedia:Veckans tävling/Videosprint 2/Wikidatalista; Usage on uk.wikipedia.org Безпека в останню чергу! Usage on www.wikidata.org Q778755
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The climactic scene involves the young woman sleepwalking precariously on the outside ledge of a tall building, anticipating Lloyd's more famous skyscraper-scaling scenes in Safety Last! (1923). A subplot has Lloyd and his friend getting inebriated on homemade liquor and then trying to avoid a prohibition -era policeman who pursues them for ...
Safety Last!, directed by Fred C. Newmeyer and Sam Taylor, starring Harold Lloyd; Salomé, directed by Charles Bryant, starring Alla Nazimova; Scaramouche, directed by Rex Ingram, Starring Ramón Novarro, Alice Terry and Lewis Stone; Schatten – Eine nächtliche Halluzination (Shadows - a Nocturnal Hallucination), directed by Arthur Robison –
Banner Creighton’s bullets couldn’t stop 1923‘s Jacob, but the series’ Season 1 finale finds a weapon even more likely to put the Dutton family patriarch in the ground: Donald Whitfield ...
Harold Clayton Lloyd Sr. (April 20, 1893 – March 8, 1971) was an American actor, comedian, and stunt performer who appeared in many silent comedy films. [1]One of the most influential film comedians of the silent era, Lloyd made nearly 200 comedy films, both silent and talkies, from 1914 to 1947.
The July 4, 1923, heavyweight title fight between Jack Dempsey and Tommy Gibbons in Shelby, Montana, stands out as one of the most economically disastrous events in boxing history.