Keen to climb the social ladder by marrying a rich widow, Oliver finds the nerve to cheat on his partner Stanley. What he doesn't know is that her favorite hobby is murder--and it looks like... Read allKeen to climb the social ladder by marrying a rich widow, Oliver finds the nerve to cheat on his partner Stanley. What he doesn't know is that her favorite hobby is murder--and it looks like he's next. Who can save Oliver the Eighth?Keen to climb the social ladder by marrying a rich widow, Oliver finds the nerve to cheat on his partner Stanley. What he doesn't know is that her favorite hobby is murder--and it looks like he's next. Who can save Oliver the Eighth?
Featured reviews
Stan, Ollie and Mae Busch all join in to create an incredible pantomime dinner party.
Stan and Ollie are with perfect partners in this film.
The interaction between all the characters is perfect. Barty's speaking voice is also hysterical. It has a bit of English sound, mixed with a deep rasp. His enunciation is sublime.
Sublety abounds. "Madame" (Mae Busch) is perfect as she slides in and out of a sort of schizo-dementia.
You will be glad to see this masterwork and to have in your collection when you need a lift. What great great actors.
Anyway as some of the other reviewers on this page have noted this has a very strange , very dark feel to it . In many ways it feels like Stan and Oliver have walked into a film based on a work of Edgar Allan Poe , and for the first time watching the season of L&H shorts on BBC 2 I couldn`t help noticing gaps in logic in the story , watch OLIVER THE EIGHTH and I promise you that you`ll be saying " Hey , why didn`t they ....? " . Despite these criticisms this certainly one of the better shorts , the bedroom scenes had me laughing out loud , but not for the first time we`re treated to a really bad cop out ending . Oh well nothing is perfect
Hardy gets mixed up with murderess Mae, whose last seven husbands were all named "Oliver." Only he doesn't know it --YET. Jack Barty, who worked with Stan Laurel in silent films, appears as Mae's eccentric butler, playing with an invisible deck of cards? There's also a funny scene with the boys being served dinner with empty glasses and plates, pretending to enjoy a hearty meal. Their next stop is to sleep in a creepy bedroom --waiting for Mae to enter to cut Ollie's throat!
Best bit is a "technical" gag scene where Hardy has to keep Stan awake. It involves a burning candle, a brick and a string. Where Hardy got the brick remains a mystery. Ollie rolls the string around the brick and hooks it above the candle. Next, Stan has to keep moving the string -- or else the string will burn and the brick will hit him on the head. Get it? Of course, Ollie gets whacked. His facial expressions throughout this film are priceless, let alone his moans and groans after nearly being shot.
On a sad note, Stan's brother, nicknamed "Teddy," died suddenly during filming. Teddy worked briefly as a film actor in the 1920s, but gave it up. In a bizarre accident, he died of a heart attack at the dentists office while being given laughing gas.
This film was co-written by Jack Barty, who also added dialogue to Laurel and Hardy's previous film, SONS OF THE DESERT.
Remastered dvd box set, both in black and white and in color. Thanks much to METV Plus for running these golden oldies every day. Also MOVIES Net on Saturday mornings.
This little film is somewhat of a change of pace for the Boys, but it's very funny and they lampoon its Gothic mood quite nicely. Mae Busch is lots of fun as the widow.
Miss Busch was born in Australia, moved with her parents to America as a child, and went on stage. By 1912, she had made her first movie. By the end of the decade, known as 'the Versatile Vamp' and prized by comedy directors for her aim with crockery, she was starring in dramas and comedies. She is best remembered, however, for her 15 appearances with Laurel and Hardy, from 1927 through 1936. She died in 1946 at age 54.
Did you know
- TriviaStan Laurel's actual brother Edward Jefferson (Teddy) died in a dentist's chair during the filming of 'Oliver the Eighth'. He went in to have some teeth extracted and died of heart failure after receiving the anesthetic. He was 33.
- GoofsWhen Stan is eating the "soup", he unbuttons some of his vest buttons, but in subsequent shots they are buttoned and unbuttoned.
- Quotes
Stanley: [reading newspaper] Listen to this: "Wealthy young widow with large fortune wishes to communicate with congenial young man. Object: matrimony. Reply Box 204J."
Oliver: Probably some old crab with a face that would stop a clock! I wouldn't want to marry her no matter how much money she had.
Stanley: Well, I'd marry her.
Oliver: You would!
Stanley: Well, after all, beauty's only skin deep. I'd take some of the money and I'd have her face lifted. Then I could settle down and I wouldn't have to scrape chins any more - wouldn't have to work hard any more.
Oliver: Tell me that again.
Stanley: Huh?
Oliver: Let me hear that again.
Stanley: Well, if beauty was only knee--skin deep, I could take some of the money and I could have her skinned. Then she'd be able to look at a clock without having to work hard any more. Then we could settle down and I could scrape her chin and congenial, if-if I didn't have to work hard anymore.
Oliver: That's a good idea.
- Alternate versionsThere is also a colorized version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Omnibus: Cuckoo: A Celebration of Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy (1974)
- SoundtracksI'm Sitting on Top of the World
(1925) (uncredited)
Music by Ray Henderson
Lyrics by Sam Lewis and Joe Young
Sung a cappella briefly by Oliver Hardy
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Dick und Doof auf Freiersfüßen
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 27m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1