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  1. Safety Last! is a 1923 American silent romantic comedy film starring Harold Lloyd. It includes one of the most famous images from the silent film era: Lloyd clutching the hands of a large clock as he dangles from the outside of a skyscraper above moving traffic. The film was highly successful and critically hailed, and it cemented Lloyd's ...

    • 74 min
    • 18.1K
    • Silent Movie Cinema
  2. 1.9G. The comic genius of silent star Harold Lloyd is eternal. Chaplin is the sweet innocent, Keaton the stoic outsider, but Lloyd—the modern guy striving for success—is us. And with its torrent of perfectly executed gags and astonishing stunts, Safety Last! is the perfect introduction to him. Lloyd plays a small-town bumpkin trying to make ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Safety_Last!Safety Last! - Wikipedia

    Safety Last! is a 1923 American silent romantic-comedy film starring Harold Lloyd. It includes one of the most famous images from the silent-film era: Lloyd clutching the hands of a large clock as he dangles from the outside of a skyscraper above moving traffic. The film was highly successful and critically hailed, and it cemented Lloyd's ...

  4. Watch Safety Last! (1923), one of the most beloved silent comedies of all time, starring Harold Lloyd in his most famous role. This film is celebrated for it...

    • 74 min
    • 4
    • Virtual Thrills Studio
  5. 📚 SALE: "An American Comedy — Harold Lloyd's Autobiography: A reissue of the original 1928 edition" — ReelOldMovies.com or via Amazon https://www.amazon.com...

    • 73 min
    • 5.3K
    • Reel Old Movies
  6. Safety Last! is a 1923 American silent romantic comedy film starring Harold Lloyd. It includes one of the most famous images from the silent film era: Lloyd clutching the hands of a large clock as he dangles from the outside of a skyscraper above moving traffic.

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  8. It is one of the most celebrated images in cinema. Safety Last! was Harold Lloyd’s fourth and most complex “thrill” comedy. He came upon the idea for the film after witnessing a so-called “human fly” climb up the side of a tall building—a typical spectacle in the stunt-crazed America of the 1920s. Nearly 40 years later Lloyd ...

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