Monty Banks
Director
68
Filmes
0
Séries
Monty Banks was a short, stocky but somehow debonair Italian-born comic actor, later also writer and director. In the US from 1914, he first appeared on stage in musical comedy and cabaret. By 1917 he was working as a dancer in New York's Dominguez Cafe. After this he turned to films, acting and doing stunt work at Keystone, Universal and for Al Christie. Changing his name from Mario Bianchi to Monty Banks may have been prompted by Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle as a passing reference to his playing '"montebanks". By 1919 Banks had moved to Vitagraph to play a villain in The Grocery Clerk (1919), foil to star comic Larry Semon. Banks first came to the fore in his own right as star of the "Welcome Comedies" made by Warner Brothers. He spent the early 1920s at Fox and Grand Asher, graduating to writing and directing two-reel comedies with himself as the star. Most noteworthy entries in regard to inventive sight gags and Mack Sennett--style madcap plots are Pay or Move (1924) and The Golf Bug (1924). The success of this series prompted Banks to create an independent production company, the Monty Banks Pictures Corporation, in conjunction with writer/director Howard Estabrook. He made several feature-length films for Pathe, including Play Safe (1927)) (generally considered his best work), which featured a climactic runaway train sequence. This style of fast-action slapstick made it inevitable that Banks suffered more than his fair share of injuries, especially since he continued to do many of his own stunts. From the late 1920s Banks worked in England and made several appearances in sound films. However, his accent proved to be something of an obstacle. He therefore decided, after 1930, to concentrate on directing and producing. He helmed four features starring the popular entertainer Gracie Fields, who became his second wife in 1940. In 1935 he directed a well-received George Formby comedy, No Limit (1935), about the TT motorcycle races on the Isle of Man, which were shot on location there. With the outbreak of World War II Banks--being an Italian citizen--would have faced internment in England as an enemy alien. He therefore deemed it necessary to flee to Canada, and from there to the neutral United States. He eventually obtained American citizenship, for which he had applied years earlier, but had forgotten to submit the necessary paperwork. Back in Hollywood he ended up at 20th Century-Fox, directing Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy in Great Guns (1941), arguably one of their lesser efforts. Banks died of a heart attack during a trip through Italy in January 1950, aged just 52. Sadly, the majority of his one- and two-reelers are now considered lost films. As a result, his status as a leading comic of the silent screen may have somewhat diminished--except, perhaps, in his home town of Cesena, where a foundation was established in his honor (the "Aula Didattica Monty Banks"), offering students "practical courses on experimental aspects of video production".
Por Trás das Câmeras
Great Guns
Director
The Tenderfoot
Adaptation
Man of the Moment
Director
Horse Shoes
Historia, Guionista, Productor Ejecutivo
Heads We Go
Director
You Made Me Love You
Director
Leave It to Me
Director
Tonight's the Night - Pass It On
Director
Shipyard Sally
Director
Keep Your Seats, Please
Director
No Limit
Director
Keep Smiling
Director
Money for Nothing
Director
We're Going to Be Rich
Director
Cocktails
Director
L'amour et la veine
Director
The Black Hand Gang
Director
Almost a Honeymoon
Director, Escritor
Why Sailors Leave Home
Director
Atta Boy
Productor Ejecutivo
Queen of Hearts
Director
Kiss Me Sergeant
Director
For the Love of Mike
Director
The Church Mouse
Director
18 Minutes
Director
Keep Smiling
Escritor
Poor Old Bill
Director
Old Soldiers Never Die
Productor, Director
Not So Quiet on the Western Front
Director
The Compulsory Husband
Director
Como Ator/Atriz
Sangre y arena
Antonio Lopez
A Bell for Adano
Giuseppe
Love
Farmhand
Man of the Moment
Doctor
Horse Shoes
Monty Milde
Days of Thrills and Laughter
Self (archive footage)
Heads We Go
Chauffeur
You Made Me Love You
Taxi Driver (uncredited)
So You Won't Talk
Tony
The Purple Mask
Jack Elliot & Jacques, Patricia's Butler (as Mario Bianchi)
Leave It to Me
Tonight's the Night - Pass It On
Convict
Shipyard Sally
Ça, c'est du cinéma
(archive footage)
Atlantic
Dandy
The Garage
Man with Dog (uncredited)
Too Much Johnson
Leon Dathis
Where Is My Wife?
The Jealous Husband
One Night Only
Atta Boy
Monty Milde
Queen of Hearts
Montague Banking
Adam's Apple
Monty Adams
Don't Park Here
A Rival
For the Love of Mike
Chef
Cold Hearts and Hot Flames
The Sheriff
The Church Mouse
Harry Blump, the Window Washer (uncredited)
A Blind Pig
French Salesman
Flying Luck
The Boy
Six A.M.