Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaJeanette and Eddie get married, but their wedding night is a fiasco. First, their wedding guests follow them, resulting in a police chase, then the guests show up at their apartment, disrupt... Leggi tuttoJeanette and Eddie get married, but their wedding night is a fiasco. First, their wedding guests follow them, resulting in a police chase, then the guests show up at their apartment, disrupting the building. Then, a rowdy sailor friend of Eddie's shows up, accompanied by a squad ... Leggi tuttoJeanette and Eddie get married, but their wedding night is a fiasco. First, their wedding guests follow them, resulting in a police chase, then the guests show up at their apartment, disrupting the building. Then, a rowdy sailor friend of Eddie's shows up, accompanied by a squad of even rowdier buddies and an enormous vengeful mosquito.
- Policeman
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- Motorcycle Policeman
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- Party Guest
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- Party Guest
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- Sailor
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- Sailor
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Recensioni in evidenza
Fans of old-time slapstick, Hal Roach style, are in for a treat. The last scene with a room full of assorted characters including the bride and groom attempting to swat the pesky insect is hilarious and shows the audience where the term "slap stick" originated.
For example, every sound film Laurel and Hardy made at Roach has, as its soundtrack, selections from a small group of humorous, tinny sounding melodies played by a small brass and string ensemble. The exact same tunes show up in every single L&H movie. Here, the opening credit music and closing music are the same tune, taken from this very collection.
The most notable character in "Benny, from Panama", is the great Arthur Housman, playing the drunk husband who lives on the floor below that upon which most of the action takes place. Housman spent his entire career playing drunks, for me most memorably in the classic L&H short "The Fixer-Uppers".
Other recognizable elements include (1) an enormous Oliver Hardy-sized fall into a bathtub; (2) bizarre physical deformation humor (a literally throbbing big toe that expands and shrinks like a balloon); (3) people walking into walls randomly, and so on, pretty much with the exact pacing and sounds and facial reactions that you would find in any Laurel and Hardy movie.
Of course, this is not accidental. This short was directed by James Parrott, who directed a huge number of L&H shorts, silent and sound, and so it is not surprising that there are so many similarities. Yet these elements are fun to look for. Otherwise, other than a few slapstick gags, "Benny from Panama" is not particularly funny, and the experimental use of a cartoon mosquito to pester and dive-bomb the large crowds of people inside the main room is, though interesting, not really effective effective.
** (out of 4)
This short is part of the "Hal Roach's All-Stars" series and features Jeanette Loff and Eddie Foy, Jr., who play newlyweds that fall into one disaster after another. Just as they get settled into their hotel their friends show up to party until the middle of the night and then things get worse when Benny (James P. Burtis), an old friend of Eddie's shows up for some more partying. This was the first film from the series that I've seen and I must say that I hope the others are much better. This certainly isn't an awful short but there's still not enough laughs to carry its 20-minute running time. I think the best portion of the film happens at the start when the two are married and right off the bat her dress catches fire and she has to strip in the back of the car only to then get pulled over by the police. These sequences are things we've seen in countless earlier Roach films but they're given some new life here and the viewer gets a couple laughs. I think the weakest portion of the final are the final ten-minutes or so once the "friends" come over and destroy everything. The stuff with the party guests simply aren't funny and things don't get any better once Benny shows up. What's even worse is an animated sequence involving a Panama mosquito but the laughs still don't come. Both Foy and Loff are in fine form but one wishes they had more to work with. Spanky from the Our Gang shorts has a quick cameo.
Lo sapevi?
- Colonne sonoreNow That We're Alone
(uncredited)
Music by Marvin Hatley
Lyrics by Marvin Hatley and James Parrott
Performed by Jeanette Loff
I più visti
Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione19 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1