Highest rated movie: Duck Soup (1933)
Lowest rated movie: Cruel, Cruel Love (1914)
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Looking for reviews of Edgar Kennedy movies? Cinafilm has a total of 1,072 reviews across 46 movies.
Movies starring Edgar Kennedy have generally received mixed reviews and hold an average score of 59%.
Duck Soup - released in 1933 - is Edgar Kennedy's highest rated movie, with a score of 82% based on 590 reviews.
The lowest rated film from Edgar Kennedy is Cruel, Cruel Love - released in 1914 - with a score of 35% based on 4 reviews.
Edgar Livingston Kennedy (April 26, 1890 – November 9, 1948) was an American comedic film character actor, known as "Slow Burn". A slow burn is an exasperated facial expression, performed very deliberately; Kennedy embellished this by rubbing his hand over his bald head and across his face, in an attempt to hold his temper. Kennedy is best known for a small role as a lemonade vendor in the Marx Brothers film Duck Soup, as well as the many Hal Roach films he appeared in.
Kennedy became so identified with frustration that practically every studio hired him to play hotheads. He often played dumb cops, detectives, and even a prison warden; sometimes he was a grouchy moving man, truck driver, or blue-collar workman. His character usually lost his temper at least once. In Diplomaniacs, Kennedy presides over an international tribunal, where Wheeler & Woolsey want to do something about world peace. "Well, ya can't do anything about it here", yells Kennedy, "this is a peace conference!" Kennedy, established as the poster boy for frustration, even starred in an instructional film titled The Other Fellow, in which loudmouthed roadhog Edgar always vents his anger on other drivers (each one played by Kennedy as well), little realizing that, to them, he is "the other fellow."
Perhaps his most unusual roles were as a puppeteer in the detective mystery The Falcon Strikes Back and as a philosophical bartender inspired to create exotic cocktails in Harold Lloyd's last film, The Sin of Harold Diddlebock (1947). He also played comical detectives opposite two titans of acting: John Barrymore in Twentieth Century (1934) and Rex Harrison in Unfaithfully Yours (1948); in the latter, he tells conductor Harrison that "Nobody handles Handel like you handle Handel."
Kennedy died of throat cancer at the Motion Picture Hospital, San Fernando Valley on 9 November 1948. His body was interred at the Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City, Los Angeles County, California.
Edgar Kennedy has acted in films with Charlie Chaplin, Minta Durfee, Billy Gilbert and Chester Conklin.
Edgar Kennedy has worked with these film directors: Mack Sennett, Charlie Chaplin, George Nichols and William A. Seiter.
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