Egged On

1926
6.6| 0h24m| en
Details

Charley invents a machine that turns ordinary, breakable eggs into rubbery, unbreakable ones for transport. He builds a Rube Goldberg contraption of parts stolen from his neighbors. Rival egg companies want his invention, one of them stooping to sabotage to get it.

Director

Producted By

Bowers Comedy Corporation

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Reviews

Alicia I love this movie so much
Incannerax What a waste of my time!!!
Lidia Draper Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.
Delight Yes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.
Horst in Translation ([email protected]) "Egged on" is a 23-minute black-and-white short film that has its 90th anniversary this year. It is a silent film and 1926 is actually already one of the years of the transition to sound film. Maybe the fact that Charlie Bowers was a bit late compared to Chaplin, Keaton and Lloyd with his silent works is the main reason why almost nobody has heard of him today anymore despite having had a fairly prolific career behind and in front of the camera. Another reason may be the contents. He did mostly comedy, but i cannot say I found the works I have seen from him funny in any way and this includes this one here too. That's why I cannot recommend checking it out. Not captivating in terms of story or comedy. Thumbs down.
Snow Leopard You can always expect Charley Bowers's comedies to feature some inventive and often spectacular visual effects, and this is not an exception. It's good comedy overall, and there is one wonderful sequence that almost upstages the rest of the movie.Most of the first part of the movie is the more conventional kind of slapstick, but most of it works well enough, and it sets up the sequences featuring Charley's efforts to build and demonstrate his latest invention. The gadget and, especially, some of the camera tricks, are worth the wait.The highlight is the "hatching" gag, and it is a real delight - elaborately planned and filmed, detailed, amusing, and even cute. What makes it even better is that it is set up so that it runs just counter to your expectations for the sequence. Bowers also gets a lot of mileage out of the scene, and almost any movie would be worth seeing for that one sequence alone.It's very fortunate that some of Bowers' features have finally become available, and this is one that is certainly well worth seeing.
wmorrow59 Charley Bowers was one of a kind: silent film comedian, newspaper cartoonist, and a true pioneer of animation. A recently released double-DVD set containing the bulk of his surviving films proclaims "The Rediscovery of an American Comic Genius." Bowers' work is fascinating, and in the field of puppet animation he was most definitely a brilliant innovator, but as much as I enjoy his movies I have some reservations about him as a screen performer. Bowers' shortcomings are clear in Egged On, which aside from one mesmerizing sequence is a somewhat frustrating film.As usual Charley plays an inventor who creates a bizarre machine, in this case a Rube Goldberg-like device for making eggs unbreakable. The plot hinges on whether Charley will be able to sell his machine, make a fortune, and marry his fiancée, a farm girl who has persuaded her father to let Charley build this enormous machine in his barn.Sounds like a decent premise, but after a promising opening the early scenes don't deliver. Charley is in an office building where he approaches various businessmen, trying to get funding for his machine. In order to demonstrate the need for an unbreakable egg he finds it necessary to remind the gentlemen that eggs break too easily; and each time he does so (breaking eggs on desks, throwing them at walls, etc.) he is ejected from the office. Over and over again. After this happens a few times you just want to grab the guy and shake him. Bowers' character is slow on the uptake, and also seems to lack empathy: later, when he's building his machine, Charley thinks nothing of swiping the parts he needs from any available source, whether he has to steal from neighbors or chop off an old man's beard. (Today we'd call Charley a techno-geek, the kind of guy who gets totally obsessed with projects and goes several days without sleeping or bathing.) The character's self-involvement and dogged cluelessness where other people are concerned wouldn't be much of a problem if he made us laugh, but the routines he performs in the film's first reel are more off-putting than amusing.However -- and this is typical of Bowers' movies -- as soon as the animated sequence begins, all is forgiven. The highlight of Egged On is a scene in which tiny cars hatch out of eggs, and it's incredible. It comes towards the end of the film and lasts for only about two minutes, but it's amazing and funny, and well worth waiting for. Strangely enough, just about every extant Bowers film features eggs in one way or another, and a couple of others have scenes in which machines hatch from eggs. Go figure.I believe Charley Bowers' best surviving films are Now You Tell One and There It Is, but all of them have at least a sequence or two that is truly original and memorable. Whether or not he was a "Comic Genius," the man is most definitely worthy of discovery.P.S. Perhaps I should add that I wrote this review after seeing Egged On at home, on TV. More recently, when I saw it at a public screening with an audience, the crowd laughed heartily at those early scenes I found repetitive. Just goes to show, these films were made for audiences, not to watch alone!
Miles-10 It may be that the only place where you can find this movie is at a museum in Montreal, but it is worth seeing. Funny and imaginative, it could well tickle you where it counts. Stop-action animation is used to make excellent jokes, yet is fully integrated into the outrageous story.