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Slapstick films are comedy films where physical comedy that includes pratfalls, tripping, falling, are highlighted over dialogue, plot and character development.[1] The physical comedy in these films contains a cartoonish style of violence that is predominantly harmless and goofy in tone.[1]
Silent film had slapstick comedies that included the films starring Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, the Keystone Cops and Harold Lloyd.[1] These comedians often laced their slapstick with social commentary while comedians such as Abbott and Costello, Laurel and Hardy and The Three Stooges did not contain these social messages.[1]
There were less slapstick comedies produced at the advent of sound film.[1] The genre resurfaced after the World War II in France with films by Jacques Tati and in the United States with films It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World and The Great Race as well as the films of comedians like Jerry Lewis.[1]
Slapstick films include:
Charlie Chaplin, D. W. Griffith, The Birth of a Nation, Animation, The Jazz Singer
Satire, Literature, Theatre, Aristotle, Stand-up comedy
Cold War, Battle of Stalingrad, Nazi Germany, Battle of the Atlantic, Second Sino-Japanese War
Clay animation, Computer animation, Anime, Toy Story, The Lion King
Buster Keaton, Soup to Nuts, American Broadcasting Company, Curly Howard, Vaudeville
Comedy, Charlie Chaplin, Marx Brothers, Mel Brooks, Vaudeville
Comedy, Horror fiction, Edgar Allan Poe, Black comedy, Silent film
Slapstick, Comedy, Animation, Humour, Anachronism