Poor Jake's Demise is a 1913 American silentshortslapstickcomedy film directed by Allen Curtis featuring Max Asher, Louise Fazenda, and Lon Chaney. The film focuses on Jake who finds his wife in a compromising position with another man and later takes his revenge with a seltzer bottle. It is one of several slapstick comedy films Chaney made for Universal at the start of his career and is also his first credited screen role.
The film is partially lost, but a fragment of the film (running almost 8 minutes) was discovered in England in May 2006 and restored by Lobster Films of Paris.[1][2]
Plot
Jake comes home and finds his wife and Willy ("The Dude") Mollycoddle in a compromising position. Enraged, Jake throws Willy out of the house and scolds his wife and threatens to kill himself. Fearful that Jake will commit suicide, the wife calls the police and three officers are sent out to find Jake. Stopping at a bar before he commits suicide, Jake finds the Dude who is drowning his sorrows. Jake takes his revenge on Willy with a seltzer bottle.[3][4] Later Jake drunkenly walks down to a park fountain where he is mugged and knocked out by some ruffians. The police find Jake unconscious and carry him home to his wife, who thinks Jake has really killed himself. She contacts the Dude who comes over to help her prepare Jake's funeral arrangements, but when Jake suddenly revives from his stupor, the Dude runs out of the house in terror. Jake and his wife make up and decide to repair their marriage.
In 1957, an article by Jim Neal of the Denton Record-Chronicle cited this as the first of Lon Chaney's films.[13] Don G. Smith's book, Lon Chaney, Jr.: Horror Film Star, 1906-1973, also claims this film as Chaney's first.[14] Rosemary Guiley would also refer to this claim in The Encyclopedia of Vampires, Werewolves, and Other Monsters.[15] Chronologically, this is the first released film with a confirmed credit for Chaney and also the first billed release. According to Blake, Chaney did not appear in The Honor of the Family, Suspense, or The Ways of Fate, three earlier films sometimes credited to him.[4]