I mentioned a month or so an early Harold Lloyd feature that I had on my DVR when TCM aired two one-hour features in a Silent Sunday Night's Block. After blogging about For Heaven's Sake, the other movie in that block was Grandma's Boy.
Harold Lloyd once again plays The Boy, although there's an establishing sequence before we see Lloyd. The Boy lives in a small town called Blossom Bend, one of those towns that John Nesbitt would have talked about in his Passing Parade shorts, as it really is the sort of place that's been passed over. The Boy would be a mama's boy, except that he lives with Grandma (an actress named Anna Townsend whom I hadn't heard of before). And he's been that sort of boy his whole life, incredibly timid and finding everybody walking over him. (The shot of a one-year-old Boy already wearing the Harold Lloyd glasses is a fun little sight gag.)
Cut to the present day, when The Boy is 19 years old (Lloyd, who plays him, was 28 at the time) and all grown up, at least physically. Emotionally, he's just as much a coward as he always was. But he's interested in The Girl (Mildred Davis, who would marry Lloyd the following year and remain married for 45 years until her death). Mildred isn't uninterested in him, but he's not the only Boy in town. Also interested in The Girl is The Rival (Charles Stevenson, who was 35 at the time and looks it). The Rival is a bully, and treats The Boy like dirt, largely because he knows he can get away with it.
The night of the big dance comes up, and the Boy, having had his one suit destroyed by The Bully, is given Grandpa's old suit, which is in mothballs since it dates back to the Civil War (remember, that would only have been 60 years prior to the movie, and had Grandpa been alive he probably would have been in his early-to-mid 80s). Grandma's trying to help her grandson because she knows he's going to have to strike out on his own someday and the world is going to be way too cruel to a coward such as the Boy currently is.
That night, the police discover that a tramp who has been through the town several times before and been a problem for the police every other time is back in town and causing all sorts of criminal mayhem. The police deputize all the adult men in town, except for The Boy, having run out of badges. Grandma realizes he needs serious help. But how? She decides to tell her grandson about Grandpa's (Lloyd again, this time with ridiculous sideburns) exploits in the Civil War, aided by a special magic charm that she then gives to The Boy.
You can probably guess where the movie is going to go from here, but then a movie like Grandma's Boy isn't so much about suspense as to what the destination is going to be as much as it is about how they get to that destination. Harold Lloyd, despite being relatively early in his career and not having worked much with features, still does so expertly, providing a good mix of both sight gags and suspense.
There's a reason I like Harold Lloyd a whole lot more than Chaplin, and films like Grandma's Boy are part of that reason.