

During America’s Civil War, Union spies steal engineer Johnny Gray's beloved locomotive, 'The General'—with Johnnie's lady love aboard an attached boxcar—and he single-handedly must do all in his power to both get The General back and to rescue Annabelle.
Stunts
Keaton performed every train gag himself, no insurance, no doubles.
Practical Effects
Real locomotive destroyed in bridge collapse — most expensive shot of 1920s.
Direction
Comedy as geometry: every gag mapped like military strategy.

Director
Clyde Bruckman
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The train crash into the river was filmed in one take with 500 locals watching; Keaton banned retakes because he'd destroyed the only engine.
Initially a box office disappointment, The General was reassessed in the 1960s when Keaton's deadpan brilliance finally matched audience sensibilities — proving comedy needs time to land.