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Brown of Harvard
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Directed by Jack Conway
While the mid-1920s were deluged with films about college life, and Brown of Harvard is probably the ultimate silent film in this genre, even more significantly it is an early example of the buddy film. Never mind the romance between Harvard undergrad Tom Brown (William Haines) and professor's daughter, Mary Abbott (Mary Brian) -- the real love story, and the one that truly moves the film's plot, is the one between the handsome, athletic Brown and his weakling sidekick Jim Doolittle (Jack Pickford) (in fact, the physical contrast between the two men is echoed in another important buddy film which came out some 40 years later -- Midnight Cowboy). The relationship between the two young men is established right from the beginning, when the brash and cocky Brown easily wins over his dormitory mates but refuses to let them ostracize Doolittle. Doolittle becomes Brown's biggest champion and their mutual loyalty is much more straightforward than Brown's pursuit of Mary, who can't decide whether she hates him, loves him, or prefers his stuffy rival, Bob MacAndrews (Francis X. Bushman, Jr.). Doolittle sticks by his pal when he loses the rowing competition against Yale, and later on risks his life by chasing after Brown in a pouring rainstorm to tell him that he hasn't been scratched from the football team after all. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
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Brown of Harvard was pivotal in the career of William Haines. Although Pickford was nominally the star, Haines had the bigger, flashier role, and it set the stage for most of his starring vehicles throughout the rest of the 1920s. The actor became famous for playing over-confident, self-centered characters who, by the film's end, would get their comeuppance and would then win the audience's sympathy as humbler and much wiser men. Haines never really escaped this stereotype, which was not necessarily a bad thing because he did it so well. But even if Brown of Harvard had no historical significance whatsoever, as entertainment it has held up quite well. Even though the students' outfits and slang are very much of their era, the relationships between the three main characters played by Haines, Pickford and Brian still ring true. Haines, especially, is engaging as the youthful jerk who proves he's a good guy after all. Viewers don't have to be silent film fans -- or college sports aficionados, for that matter -- to enjoy the humor and humanity of Brown of Harvard. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
 

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