Slapstick Comedy
Slapstick is a type of comedy involving physical action. One classic
piece of slapstick comedy is to have a person slip on a banana peel and
fall to the ground with limbs flailing. The style was explored
extensively during the "golden era" of black and white, silent movies
directed by Mack Sennett and Hal Roach and featuring such
notables as Buster Keaton , Charlie Chaplin , Laurel and Hardy
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and the Keystone Kops , reaching perhaps its fullest and most
hilarious flower with the Three Stooges in their series of talking
short films. It is also common in animated cartoons like Tom and
Jerry and The Roadrunner , where violence can be portrayed in
a wildly exaggerated fashion.
The style is derived from the Commedia dell'arte which employed a
great deal of physical abuse and tumbling. The phrase comes from a
device they used composed of two wooden slats which looked like a bat
and which, when struck, produced a loud popping noise with very little
force. This battacio, or slapstick as it was called in English, allowed
the actors to strike each other repeatedly while causing very little
actual damage. It was a very early form of special effect .
In recent times, violence in comedy has been decried by many, but many
modern films like Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and Scream combine
violence and comedy, not to mention Itchy and Scratchy and it is
unlikely that this traditional source of laughs will ever disappear.
Modern comedy films often use elements of slapstick, such as Dumb and
Dumber and the works of the Farrelly Brothers .
See also: laughter , slapstick film
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