The Cameraman is a 1928 American silent comedy directed by Edward Sedgwick and an uncredited Buster Keaton. The picture stars Buster Keaton, Marceline Day, Harold Goodwin, and others. The Cameraman was Keaton's first film with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It is considered by fans and critics to be Keaton still in top form, and it was added to the National Film Registry in 2005 as being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." Within a little over a year, however, MGM would take away Keaton's creative control over his pictures, thereby causing drastic and long-lasting harm to... his career. Keaton was later to call the move to MGM "the worst mistake of my career." Prints of the movie disappeared and it was considered lost. However, a print of the entire film was discovered in Paris in 1968. Another print, of much higher quality, although missing some footage, was discovered in 1991. The two prints were combined into a best-available quality version which is regularly screened around the world. Buster , a sidewalk tintype portrait photographer, develops a crush on Sally , a secretary who works for MGM Newsreels.
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| Release date: | 1928 |
| Directed by: | Edward Sedgwick, Buster Keaton |
| Runtime: | 67 Minutes |
| Producer: | Buster Keaton, Lawrence Weingarten |
| Editor: | Hugh Wynn |
| Music by: | Bee vs. Moth |
| Cinematography: | Reggie Lanning, Elgin Lessley, Elgin Lessley |
| Screenplay by: | Clyde Bruckman, Joseph Farnham, Lew Lipton, Byron Morgan, Richard Schayer |
| Genre: | Comedy |