One Week: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{work|One Week (1920 film)}}
[[File:oneweek_5926.jpg|frame| Where's ''[[Extreme Makeover: Home Edition]]'' when you need them?]]
[[File:oneweek_5926.jpg|frame| Where's ''[[Extreme Makeover: Home Edition]]'' when you need them?]]


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This film is in the public domain and can be viewed in its entirety at [https://web.archive.org/web/20120523010534/http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3147358394537366471 Google Video].
This film is in the public domain and can be viewed in its entirety at [https://web.archive.org/web/20120523010534/http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3147358394537366471 Google Video].


Has nothing to do with the [[Barenaked Ladies]] song.
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{{tropelist}}
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[[Category:One Week]]
[[Category:One Week]]
[[Category:Short Film]]
[[Category:Short Film]]
[[Category:Silent Film]]
[[Category:Silent Films]]

Revision as of 21:58, 28 March 2019


Where's Extreme Makeover: Home Edition when you need them?

The wedding bells have such a sweet sound but such a sour echo.

-- opening intertitle

One Week is an 1920 short film starring Buster Keaton and Sybil Seely as newlyweds who receive a DIY portable house as a wedding gift. They spend a week assembling it with disastrous results thanks to sabotage by a rejected suitor, as well as their own hilarious ineptness.

One Week was added to the National Film Registry in 2008.

This film is in the public domain and can be viewed in its entirety at Google Video.

Has nothing to do with the Barenaked Ladies song.


Tropes used in One Week include: