Never Weaken: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Film.NeverWeaken 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Film.NeverWeaken, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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* [[The Danza]]: Mildred. Harold Lloyd also signs his name "Harold" on his suicide note, making him an example as well.
* [[The Danza]]: Mildred. Harold Lloyd also signs his name "Harold" on his suicide note, making him an example as well.
* [[Driven to Suicide]]
* [[Driven to Suicide]]
* [[Happily Failed Suicide]]
* [[Happily-Failed Suicide]]
* [[Literal Cliff Hanger]]
* [[Literal Cliff Hanger]]
* [[Rump Roast]]: After Harold sits on a hot rivet.
* [[Rump Roast]]: After Harold sits on a hot rivet.

Revision as of 03:51, 9 January 2014

Never Weaken is a 1921 silent comedy film starring Harold Lloyd and directed by Fred Newmeyer.

It was Lloyd's last short film, running to three reels, before he moved permanently into feature-length production. It was also one of his trademark 'thrill' comedies, featuring him dangling from a tall building. In this film, Harold works in an office on a tall building next door to his girlfriend Mildred (Mildred Davis). He assumes they will be married, but overhears her talking to a man who says to her, "Of course I will marry you." Little does he know this is actually her big brother, who has just become a priest.

Distraught, he decides to commit suicide, blindfolding himself and setting up a gun which will fire when he pulls a string attached to the trigger. But after putting on the blindfold he accidentally knocks over a lightbulb which pops, and he assumes he has shot himself. At that moment, a girder from the next door construction site swings into his office, lifting him and his chair outside. Pulling off the blindfold, he slowly realises he is high above the city, and climbs onto a building still under construction, trying to make his way down.


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