अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंAfter an endless cycle of dish washing, Ollie makes a withdrawal, ending up in the hospital after buying a grandfather clock. Only a generous blood transfusion can help him bounce back; howe... सभी पढ़ेंAfter an endless cycle of dish washing, Ollie makes a withdrawal, ending up in the hospital after buying a grandfather clock. Only a generous blood transfusion can help him bounce back; however, is modern medicine prepared for the outcome?After an endless cycle of dish washing, Ollie makes a withdrawal, ending up in the hospital after buying a grandfather clock. Only a generous blood transfusion can help him bounce back; however, is modern medicine prepared for the outcome?
- Auctioneer
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Bank Teller
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Dr. F.D. Allen
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Hospital Visitor
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Man at Auction
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Nurse
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Auction Bidder
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Nurse Goodall
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Bank Teller
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
One Good Turn (1931) ** 1/2 (out of 4) L&H set out to raise $100 when they overhear an elderly woman say she's going to be evicted. Not too many laughs in this one outside the opening sequence in the woods.
Leave 'Em Laughing (1928) ** 1/2 (out of 4) Laurel is suffering from a toothache so Hardy takes him to the dentist who accidentally fills them with laughing gas. The early gags of Hardy trying to pull the tooth are funny but the ending with the cars goes on a bit too long and gets rather tiresome.
They Go Boom! (1929) *** (out of 4) Hardy has a cold so it's up to Laurel to try and find a cure so that they can get a good night's sleep. Highlights include the mustard bath and the exploding mattress.
Personally I felt that the banter about who gave the money to whom went on a bit longer than it needed to. I hope audiences in 1935 found it more engaging than I did.
The main reason I wanted to write a review is that I was impressed by the creative and clever way they handled scene changes from the Hardy house to other locations. Stanley grabs what might be some sort of pocket door or panel (if it were a real house) and pulls on its thick black border to walk it across the screen. The scene changes with it. In one of these clever "wipes" he accidentally lets go and it returns to the right side of the screen. So he grabs it again and walks it across the room. The scene change follows the movement of this panel. I haven't seen this trick done before. And being that this was decades before green screen, it must have been rather labor intensive to handle it in the cutting room. Bravo for this quirky little technique!
Thicker Than Water concerns Stan and Ollie, who are just about to head to the local baseball game when Ollie's wife (Daphne Pollard) scolds Ollie for ditching her with all the dishes and forces both men to wash them before leaving. After a hilarious scene, exercising Horne's directorial formula of filming various things accelerate into complete chaos, a man shows up to collect payment for some furniture Ollie and his wife bought. Following a miscommunication in funds, Stan and Ollie must withdraw the couple's savings from the bank to buy the furniture.
The scene doesn't stop there, with a whole new set of craziness awaiting at a local auction house, followed by the inevitable scolding of Stan and Ollie by Mrs. Hardy when they arrive home. Thicker Than Water shows an exuberant amount of comedic energy on part of its performers, as almost every Laurel and Hardy short does in some way, and, thanks to the incredible situational and slapstick writing by Stan Laurel and Frank Tashlin, Thicker Than Water never becomes tired or redundant in its pursuit of laughs and potboiler comedy. As the final short that featured both men in starring roles, it may not be what everyone was expecting, but it certainly is a hilarious offering. If only maybe Laurel and Hardy knew their career together was over would they have tried to conclude their work with a bang.
Starring: Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, and Daphne Pollard. Directed by: James W. Horne.
Although the film feels like it has been made up of several good ideas rather than one, it still manages to be very funny for the most part. The opening dish washing routine is a great example of how much comedy they can get from a simple concept, while the `I gave it to him to give to you' routine is a good example of their verbal skills as actors. The short continues well but isn't able to be as good as it's first half again. The final scene is funny but the whole hospital epilogue doesn't really belong and it suggests that the idea occurred to them and they just looked for a film that they could tack it onto.
This sounds like a problem but it isn't that big a deal as the majority of the film works really well. Hardy and Laurel work well together and do well with the many types of routine they have here just the routine where Laurel keeps putting clean dishes into the sink for washing is a good example of how their looks and body language can create laughs. Pollard is a good Mrs Hardy as she is feisty without being too dour. Finlayson enjoys his role as he has more dialogue than usual but also gets to do his `d'oh' and double take stuff (often it seems he either gets the physical stuff OR the dialogue).
Overall this is a really funny little short from Laurel and Hardy. The ending may feel like it doesn't belong with this film but even it manages to be worth a laugh! The fancy way that the scenes are linked (sliding doors effects) adds a novelty feel to what is a strong short from Laurel and Hardy.
The film kicks off with an amusing washing up routine, Ollie cleaning the plates, with Stan drying them and then passing them back to Ollie to wash again. When Ollie sees what Stan has been doing he tells him to put the plates elsewhere, so Stan stacks them on a lit gas burner; Ollie picks them up to put them in the cupboard, burns his hands and drops all of the crockery. So far, so chucklesome.
A little later, Laurel and Hardy regular co-star James Finlayson arrives at the house to collect payment for the Hardy's furniture, which leads to a clever verbal exchange between all of the characters akin to Abbott and Costello's famous 'Who's on first?' routine. Following this, Stan tells Ollie that he should pay for the furniture outright with his savings, but Mrs. Hardy disagrees. Egged on by Stan, Ollie goes to the bank to withdraw the cash, but instead of paying for the furniture, he mistakenly spends the money on a grandfather clock in an auction (the price going sky high thanks to Stan). On their way home with their purchase, the clock is smashed to pieces by a lorry.
When Mrs. Hardy discovers what has happened, she loses her cool and hits her husband over the head with a frying pan (climbing on a chair to do so). In hospital, Ollie requires a blood transfusion, with Stan as the donor, and the results are unexpectedly bizarre.
Not only does this short deliver solid laughs at regular intervals, but it also features some wonderful transitions, Stan pulling the next scene from the side and dragging it across the screen. It's clever stuff for the time and really adds to the fun.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThis is Laurel & Hardy's last two-reel short, except for a cameo appearance in On the Wrong Trek (1936). Hal Roach decided to move the pair into feature-length films from here on.
- गूफ़When the truck runs over the grandfather clock, there are no mechanical parts inside.
- भाव
Mrs. Daphne Hardy: Oliver, did I or did I not give you the money to pay on the furniture?
Ollie: You certainly did.
Mrs. Daphne Hardy: Then why wasn't it paid?
Ollie: [points to Stan] Why I gave it to him to pay it for me.
Mrs. Daphne Hardy: [to Stan] Then what did YOU do with it?
Stanley: [points to Ollie] I gave it back to him.
Ollie: You gave it to ME?
Stanley: Yeah, I gave it to you to pay my room and board, and you gave it to her.
[points to Mrs. Hardy]
Stanley: "Recomember"?
Mrs. Daphne Hardy: Do you mean to say that the money that he
[points to Ollie]
Mrs. Daphne Hardy: gave to you
[points to Stan]
Mrs. Daphne Hardy: that you gave to him
[points to Ollie]
Mrs. Daphne Hardy: that he gave to me was the same money that I gave to him
[points to Ollie]
Mrs. Daphne Hardy: to pay HIM?
[points to Finlayson]
Stanley: Well if that was the money that you gave to him
[points to Ollie]
Stanley: to give to me
[points to self]
Stanley: to pay to him
[points to Finlayson]
Stanley: It must have been the money I gave him
[points to Ollie]
Stanley: to give to you to pay my rent, didn't I?
[Ollie nods wildly]
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनThere is also a colorized version.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Omnibus: Cuckoo: A Celebration of Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy (1974)
टॉप पसंद
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- 1.33 : 1