Añade un argumento en tu idiomaBenny Rubin takes a tour of the "Lame Brain Sanitarium" and meets some of its strange patients.Benny Rubin takes a tour of the "Lame Brain Sanitarium" and meets some of its strange patients.Benny Rubin takes a tour of the "Lame Brain Sanitarium" and meets some of its strange patients.
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¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe Albertina Rasch Dancers ballet sequence is missing from the extant print shown on Turner Classic Movies; most likely, it was removed at one time and used in another short subject, possibly one of the early The Three Stooges entries.
- Versiones alternativasThe TCM Print omits the segment with the Albertina Rasch Dancers and runs 13 minutes--three minutes shorter.
Reseña destacada
Benny Rubin tries to check himself into a asylum run by Dr. Smith, spelled J-O-N-E-S. His secretary who wears only the front half of a dress and talks into an imaginary telephone. There's someone who tries to play a violin on the asylum's radio station (upstairs in the basement), but she breaks her G-string (on the violin, on the vi-o-lin, get your mind out of the gutter) and then breaks the violin.
There are some, I guess, sailors, one of which has invented an unbreakable plate that shatters on the floor. There are two other similarly dressed sailors laughing uncontrollably, while usually tough guy Nat Pendleton is dressed as a chef. Pendleton gets hit in the face with a plate full of beans. Beans occasionally appeared in some of Salvador Dali's work of the period, but I don't know if there was any intention of making a connection to the Surrealist movement in this short.
The humor falls short a lot of the times, although if you look at this through a surrealist mindset, you might find this more enjoyable.
There are some, I guess, sailors, one of which has invented an unbreakable plate that shatters on the floor. There are two other similarly dressed sailors laughing uncontrollably, while usually tough guy Nat Pendleton is dressed as a chef. Pendleton gets hit in the face with a plate full of beans. Beans occasionally appeared in some of Salvador Dali's work of the period, but I don't know if there was any intention of making a connection to the Surrealist movement in this short.
The humor falls short a lot of the times, although if you look at this through a surrealist mindset, you might find this more enjoyable.
- jtyroler
- 27 jul 2008
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