FILM 1197: SHERLOCK JR.
TRIVIA: Buster Keaton practiced
for four months, working with a pool expert, to learn all the trick shots that
Sherlock Jr. performs during the pool game. Nevertheless, it took him five days
to film all the trick shots, and get them right. When he was finished, all the
best trick shots he had filmed were cut together to make it look like Sherlock
Jr. was playing one continuous game of pool.
In one scene at a train station, Buster Keaton was hanging
off of a tube connected to a water basin. The water poured out and washed him
on to the track, fracturing his neck nearly to the point of breaking it. This
footage appears in the released film. Keaton suffered from blinding migraines
for years after making this movie and was unaware of the reason, until a doctor
diagnosed him in the 1930s.
Following his "entrance"
into the "movie within a movie," the scenery changes around Buster Keaton very
quickly, as if the movie is changing scenes with quick edits. (He suddenly
finds himself on a crowded city street, in the jungle confronted by lions, on a
rock in the middle of the ocean, etc.) Keaton later recalled that his
cameraman, Byron Houck,
had used surveying instruments to position him and the camera at the exact
correct distances and positions to give the illusion of continuity as the
scenes changed.
Sherlock Jr.'s assistant, Gillette,
is named after William
Gillette, the first actor to play Sherlock Holmes on stage.
According to the book Buster is
reading, the seven rules for being a detective are: 1. Search Everybody. 2. Look
for Clue. 3. Examine all windows. 4. Search for finger prints. 5. Shadow your
man closely. 6. Send for the police. 7. Keep cool. Buster actually only employs
rules #1 and #5 in the movie.


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