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Nothing But Nerves

1942

Action / Comedy

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

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98.43 MB
1280*932
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
12 hr 10 min
P/S ...
182.76 MB
1472*1072
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
12 hr 10 min
P/S 0 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by wmorrow597 / 10

Mr. Benchley has the jitters

If we consult Webster's Dictionary for a definition of "neurasthenia," we find that this condition is "an emotional and psychic disorder characterized by impaired functioning in interpersonal relationships, and often by fatigue, depression, feelings of inadequacy, headaches, hypersensitivity to sensory stimulation (as by light or noise),and other psychosomatic symptoms." Sounds rather like a bad hangover, doesn't it? If we consult Robert Benchley, humorist, we find neurasthenia dramatized in a series of hilariously evocative vignettes in this little 10-minute gem, Nothing But Nerves. This is one of Benchley's more enjoyable short comedies, perhaps because what he's really doing here is illustrating a condition he knew intimately: i.e. a bad hangover. It's no state secret that Mr. Benchley took a drink or two on occasion, and it's apparent from his heartfelt performance in this movie that the man knew something about impaired functioning.

Seated at his usual desk Mr. Benchley serves as our host, and also as his traditional cinematic alter ego, Joe Doakes. As narrator, he must contend with a faulty desk lamp that gradually drives him to distraction, while as poor bleary-eyed Doakes, still in his dressing gown, he must deal with a merciless onslaught of psychic disturbances that turn his day into a one-way trip to the Twilight Zone. The phone rings, but no one is there. The cigarette box is empty, but then, mysteriously, it is full of cigarettes. The maid goes into the closet with some magazines . . . and, eventually, reappears in a different part of the house. And then without warning, plumbers arrive and set about doing something noisy and violent to the plumbing. Doakes tries to escape this unwanted intrusion, but, as narrator Benchley astutely points out, "it's not his nemesis he needs to escape, it's his own distorted point of view on life." Doakes winds up a pathetic, hunted creature, but meanwhile our narrator manages to triumph over his own personal nemesis, that damn desk lamp.

This is a good example of Robert Benchley's wry humor, and one of the most successful attempts to capture his written style in the short film format. He was a funny man and a highly charismatic performer, and the passage of time hasn't dimmed his appeal.

Reviewed by mark.waltz7 / 10

The only person giving me a nervous breakdown is me!

Oh how I love to laugh at myself. I do it every chance I get, determined to laugh at me before anybody else laughs at me. You will be laughing at yourself too in this very clever Robert Benchley short that shows how often the only thing getting him riled up is caused by him. He's right on the money in another description of the foibles of daily life. How many times I've been a nervous wreck and started laughing at me because nobody was sabotaging me but my own delusions. Certainly, the maid isn't out to disturb him. She's just doing her job and trying to be as unobtrusive as possible. But every little squeak, every little bang, and it's tranquilizer time for Mr. Benchley. Hysterically so, and a reminder that really nothing has changed much but the date.

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