There is a saying that
laughter is the best medicine. Sometimes people do not feel well because they
are depressed or sometimes their sickness is all in their head and all they
need someone to pull them out of all their sadness or thoughts. I have been in
both situations several times. Whenever I feel like garbage because I am
depressed I stick on either a film or binge like crazy on Mamrie Hart’s videos
on YouTube. In the case of watching Mamrie Hart’s videos laughter is definitely
the best medicine and I feel ten times better than I did before. All I needed
was a good laugh and Mamrie provides it with her jokes, her crazy faces, and her
infectious laugh. Films are always there for me as well. When I was away at
school and feeling down I would always put a Hitchcock film on because I know
the characters in those stories are going through a worse time than I am. Now I
have another film that I will definitely put on when I feel down. That film is
Harold Lloyd’s 1922 silent Dr. Jack
where his character proves that laughter and happiness truly are the best
medicine.
There is a girl simply called the Sick-Little-Well-Girl
(Mildred Davis). There is nothing wrong with this poor girl but her doctor, Dr.
von Saulsbourg, has her father believing she is. The doctor is crooked and
keeps on telling the father his daughter is sick because the father has been
paying him an exorbitant amount of money. The father’s lawyer tells him that he
should really consult another physician since it has been four years since the
girl was first diagnosed. Saulsbourg overhears this conversation and in a fit
tells the father that the girl needs to be brought to his sanitarium because
her condition has worsened.
On the poorer side of town is a doctor Jackson, simply known
as Dr. Jack (Lloyd). He is a kind man who helps everyone that needs it. His
first call of the day comes from a little girl crying over the phone to hurry
over because someone has been hurt. After much bumbling and fumbling to get to
the house he finds that the little girl has called him because her baby doll
has fallen into a well. Dr. Jack pulls the doll out and pretended to revive it.
Dr. Jack’s next call is to an old woman who has been sick with loneliness. He tells
her she has a surprise coming at any moment. The surprise is the woman’s son
who happens to be the lawyer. Dr. Jack tells him that his mother seeing him has
been her best medicine. Dr. Jack then climbs out the window to help two old men
across the way. The lawyer sees that Dr. Jack has helped his mother and the
older men outside by just being kind and making them happy.
The Sick-Little-Well-Girl and the Saulsbourg are driving
back from the sanitarium when she says out loud that she cannot wait to get
home. The doctor being an evil bugger extends their time by stopping off in the
small town where Dr. Jack lives. The doctor and the Sick-Little-Well-Girl stop
off to have lunch. Dr. Jack also stops by the same place and actually sits down
at their table since all the others have been taken. Of course he immediately
falls for the Sick-Little-Well-Girl and imagine living in a castle on the
clouds if he was her doctor and also because he really likes her.
After lunch the lawyer approaches Jack and asks him to
come along to the city with him. He does not know he is going to help the
Sick-Little-Well-Girl until he gets to her house. Dr. Saulsbourg is beyond
infuriated and undermines everything that Dr. Jack gives as his diagnoses. Dr.
Jack tries to make the Sick-Little-Well-Girl happy by playing with her and
having her get up out of the chair. Saulsbourg has had enough and runs to get
the father. The father lets Dr. Jack go. Dr. Jack stays the night until he can
leave in the morning. He is sitting downstairs when the Sick-Little-Well-Girl
comes down to say goodbye to him. He promises to stay to make her better no
matter what. They start playing and making noise and the father and the other
doctor come running down. As the men discuss something Dr. Jack runs upstairs
and gets a costume going. He makes some noise that makes everyone come running
up. Dr. Jack pretends to be some kind of crazy man running around the house and
then he slips away into a room and becomes himself. Eventually Dr. Saulsbourg’s
nerves cannot handle all the action. He was about to leave until Dr. Jack tells
them all that he chased the crazy man out. The Sick-Little-Well-Girl figures
Dr. Jack out and puts the costume on herself. She goes up to her father with
such a glow after having had so much fun and tells him that Dr. Jack did
everything for them. The father then dismisses Dr. Saulsbourg.
Dr. Jack was
adorable. It is definitely one of my favorite Harold Lloyd films I have seen.
It was so lighthearted and adorable and perfect. To me this is a symbol for
what films and their stories are supposed to do they are supposed to make you
happy and forget everything that may be wrong in your life or your health for
the amount of time they run for. Lloyd’s films usually make me feel better
because they are so silly and fun and outrageous. Dr. Jack is definitely a film I suggest seeing even if you do not
watch silent films regularly because it will make you feel so much better.
Dr.
Jack
is available to view in full on YouTube.
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