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Feet First

Feet First
Feet First poster.jpg
Original US release poster.(*note the similarity to Paramount's Bebe Daniels film of 1925, Wild, Wild Susan. Daniels had been Lloyd's great female costar in his years making short films.
Directed by Clyde Bruckman
Produced by Harold Lloyd
Starring Harold Lloyd (Harold Horne)
Barbara Kent (Barbara)
Robert McWade (Mr. Tanner)
Music by Mischa Bakaleinikoff (uncredited)
Claude Lapham (uncredited)
Walter Scharf
(1962 re-release)
Cinematography Henry N. Kohler
Walter Lundin
Edited by Bernard W. Burton
Distributed by Paramount
Release date
  • November 8, 1930 (1930-11-08) (U.S.)
Running time
93 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $647,353

Feet First is a 1930 American Pre-Code comedy film starring Harold Lloyd, a very popular daredevil comedian during the 1920s and early 1930s. It was Lloyd's second and most popular sound ('talkie') feature. It is also one of his 'thrill' comedies, involving him climbing up a tall building. Harold Lloyd was one of very few silent film actors who successfully adapted to sound.

Harold Horne, an ambitious shoe salesman in Honolulu, unknowingly meets the boss' secretary Barbara (Barbara Kent) - thinking she is the boss' daughter - and tells her he is a millionaire leather tycoon.

Horne spends much of his time around Barbara hiding his true circumstances, in both the shoe store and later as an (accidental) stowaway on board a ship. Trying to evade the ship's crew, he becomes trapped in a mailbag, which is taken off the ship and falls off a delivery cart onto a window cleaner's cradle, which is hoisted upwards. Escaping from the bag, he finds himself dangling high above the streets of Los Angeles. After several thwarted attempts to get inside the building, he climbs to the very top, only to slip off - unaware his foot is caught on the end of a rope, which rescues him inches from the ground.

This was the second film with Barbara Kent, and the last occasion on which Lloyd would appear with the same leading lady.

The "hanging outside of the skyscraper" sequence used techniques similar to those on Lloyd's most famous film, the silent Safety Last! (1923). Contrary to some Hollywood lore, this scene did not utilize special effects or back projection. Before the scene in the 1962 compilation film Harold Lloyd's World of Comedy (produced by Harold Lloyd himself), a title card reads as follows:

"This sequence was made without trick photography and before process was perfected. The action — at all times — actually occurred as high up as you see it happen."

Whilst this is technically true, the impression of height was achieved by the construction of a skyscraper façade on the roof of another structure: in this case the Southern California Gas Company Building, South Broadway, Los Angeles. Lloyd had already used this technique in Safety Last!, and indeed the location used for that earlier film was only a few blocks away from this one. Additionally, the concluding sequence of the climb, where Harold Horne falls from the building with a rope attached to his foot, does briefly use back-projection for a mid shot.


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