Release and critical response Keaton first previewed the film in Long Beach, California. Although audience members gasped at some of the special effects, there were very few laughs, and Keaton began re-editing the film to make it funnier. However, the second preview screening was more disappointing than the first, and Keaton continued cutting the film down to a very short 5-reel film. Producer Joseph Schenck wanted Keaton to add another 1,000 feet of film (approximately 11 minutes), but Keaton refused. The film was retitled
Sherlock Jr. and released on April 21, 1924. It made $448,337, slightly less than
Three Ages. Keaton considered the film "alright [but] not one of the big ones", possibly due to the fact that it was his first real failure after a 25-year career on stage and screen.
Sherlock Jr. received mixed critical reviews. It received good reviews from
The New York Times, which called it "one of the best screen tricks ever incorporated in a comedy", and
Photoplay, which called it "rare and refreshing". Other positive notices came from
The Los Angeles Times,
The Washington Post, and
The Atlanta Constitution. Negative reviews included
Picture Play, which wrote that it was devoid of "ingenuity and originality".
Variety wrote it was as funny as "a hospital operating room".
Edmund Wilson of
The New Republic criticized Keaton's performance for not having enough character development and the film for having too much "machinery and stunts". In
The Nation in 1946, critic
James Agee wrote, "
Sherlock, Jr. is not one of Buster Keaton's funniest—none of his full-length films were—but it is about a hundred times as funny as anything made today. Some of the houses, yards, and streets are even more beautifully photographed than was usual in the old comedies. And one chase gag, involving a motorcycle and a long line of ditch-diggers, is hair-raising both in its mechanical perfection and as a piece of better-than-conscious surrealism."
Legacy Dwight Macdonald, in his book
On Movies, notes the sophistication of the premise: the second half of
Sherlock Junior cuts free across magical territory. By a great stroke of invention, the lovesick Buster is a movie projectionist, so that the medium becomes the artist's material, an advanced approach Buster had never heard of ... He falls asleep in the projection booth, dreaming about his girl and his frustrated love. His
doppelganger extracts itself from his sleeping body ... and walks down the aisle of the darkened theatre to climb up on the stage and into the society-crook melodrama being projected on the screen ... There's no explanation for this or any other
lapsus naturalis in this 1924 film which makes later efforts by
Dalí,
Buñuel and
Cocteau look pedestrian and a bit timid. They felt obliged to clarify matters by a symbolistic apparatus. Keaton never rose—or sunk—to that. In 2005,
Time named
Sherlock Jr. as one of the All-Time 100 Movies, writing "The impeccable comedian directs himself in an impeccable silent comedy ... Is this, as some critics have argued, an example of primitive American surrealism? Sure. But let's not get fancy about it. It is more significantly, a great example of American minimalism—simple objects and movement manipulated in casually complex ways to generate a steadily rising gale of laughter. The whole thing is only 45 minutes long, not a second of which is wasted. In an age when most comedies are all windup and no punch, this is the most treasurable of virtues." Dennis Schwartz wrote that
Sherlock Jr. is "one of Buster's superior silent comedies that's noted for his usual deadpan humor, frolicsome slapstick, the number of very funny sight gags, the many innovative technical accomplishments and that he did his own stunts (including the dangerous one where he was hanging off a ladder connected to a huge water basin as the water poured out and washed him onto the railroad track, fracturing his neck nearly to the point of breaking it. Keaton suffered from severe migraines for years after making this movie)."
David Thomson calls
Sherlock Jr. Keaton's "masterpiece" and "the most philosophically eloquent of silent comedies". Rotten Tomatoes reports an 86% approval from 44 critics, with the consensus summarizing: "
Sherlock, Jr. showcases enough of Buster Keaton's brilliance to make it well worth a watch, even if the laughs don't flow quite as freely as they do with some of his other features."
Sherlock Jr. was a major influence on
Woody Allen's
The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985), in which a character walks out of a movie and into real life. Forty minutes into the film, Buster jams on the brakes of the car he is driving, causing the chassis to stop and the body to keep going, a gag reused in the
James Bond film
The Living Daylights (1987)[?]. In 2012, it was ranked number 61 in a list of the best-edited films of all time as selected by the members of the Motion Picture Editors Guild. In the
2012 Sight & Sound polls, it was ranked the 59th-greatest film ever made in the critics' poll. In 2015,
Sherlock Jr. ranked 44th on
BBC's "100 Greatest American Films" list, voted on by film critics from around the world. On January 5, 2023, Richard Brody included it on his list of "Thirty-four Movies That Celebrate the Movies". On
January 1, 2020, the film entered into the
public domain in the United States.
Accolades In 1991,
Sherlock Jr. was selected for preservation in the United States
National Film Registry by the
Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". The film was ranked 62nd on the
American Film Institute's list
AFI's 100 Years...100 Laughs (2000). ==See also==