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Soup to Nuts

  • 1930
  • Approved
  • 1h 10m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
597
YOUR RATING
Soup to Nuts (1930)
SlapstickComedyMusicalRomance

Mr. Schmidt's costume store is bankrupt because he spends his time on Rube Goldberg-style inventions. The creditors send a young manager who falls for Schmidt's niece Louise, but she'll have... Read allMr. Schmidt's costume store is bankrupt because he spends his time on Rube Goldberg-style inventions. The creditors send a young manager who falls for Schmidt's niece Louise, but she'll have none of him. Schmidt's friends Ted, Queenie, and some goofy firemen try to help out, and ... Read allMr. Schmidt's costume store is bankrupt because he spends his time on Rube Goldberg-style inventions. The creditors send a young manager who falls for Schmidt's niece Louise, but she'll have none of him. Schmidt's friends Ted, Queenie, and some goofy firemen try to help out, and things come to a slapstick head when Louise needs rescuing from a fire.

  • Director
    • Benjamin Stoloff
  • Writers
    • Rube Goldberg
    • Lou Breslow
  • Stars
    • Ted Healy
    • Charles Winninger
    • Frances McCoy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    597
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Benjamin Stoloff
    • Writers
      • Rube Goldberg
      • Lou Breslow
    • Stars
      • Ted Healy
      • Charles Winninger
      • Frances McCoy
    • 28User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos12

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Ted Healy
    Ted Healy
    • Ted 'Teddy'
    Charles Winninger
    Charles Winninger
    • Otto Schmidt
    Frances McCoy
    • Queenie
    George Bickel
    • Gustav 'Gus' Klein
    Lucile Browne
    Lucile Browne
    • Louise - Otto's Niece
    Shemp Howard
    Shemp Howard
    • Fireman Shemp
    Stanley Smith
    Stanley Smith
    • Richard Carlson
    Moe Howard
    Moe Howard
    • Fireman
    • (as Harry Howard)
    Hallam Cooley
    Hallam Cooley
    • Mr. D. Quincy Throckmorton
    Fred Sanborn
    • Mute Fireman
    Larry Fine
    Larry Fine
    • Fireman
    Lois Moran
    Lois Moran
    • Beauty
    Ralph Elmer
    • Magician
    Roscoe Ates
    Roscoe Ates
    • Pants Presser at Al's Tailor Shop
    • (uncredited)
    Jimmy Aubrey
    Jimmy Aubrey
    • Revolutionary
    • (uncredited)
    Bobby Barber
    Bobby Barber
    • Revolutionary
    • (uncredited)
    Billy Barty
    Billy Barty
    • Junior
    • (uncredited)
    Billy Bletcher
    Billy Bletcher
    • Revolutionary
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Benjamin Stoloff
    • Writers
      • Rube Goldberg
      • Lou Breslow
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    5.7597
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    Featured reviews

    esstee55

    WAIT a minute!

    Everybody commenting here seems to forget about the fine character actor Charles Winninger, who unfortunately is one of the best things about this mediocre picture. Yeah, we Stooges fans only watched this to see our favorite slapstick guys in their very first exposure to film, and most of us already knew that Healy's semi-popularity as a comedian was a mystery. But there are indeed other things going on here, most notably the aforementioned Winninger, who's the funniest person in this film, most assuredly. Watch out for that gigantic boot!
    yarborough

    Dated today, but standard for 1930s.

    I first caught this movie at four a.m. one night and found it to be insane, pure insanity. The first half hour or so is pretty slow and not very funny, but full of shouting and sight gags. But things get going when the Stooges (with Shemp, of course) go to a restaurant and annoy the waiter. Then their peformance at a firemen's ball is a lot of fun and starts the movie with some good laughs that continue as the Stooges try to fight a blazing fire. A lot of the Stooge elements of later shorts can be found here (the fixed coin tosses, the slapping, the big fat lady) but the movie doesn't focus enough on the Stooges' personalities to create the hard laughs that the shorts have, and the lackluster performances by the supporting cast cause this movie to lag at times. But the slap fight between Shemp and Moe is hilarious.
    8springfieldrental

    Moe, Larry and Shemp's First Collective Feature Film Debut

    Ted Healy was one of vaudeville's most popular performer. His talents were so great in the 1920s he became the highest paid act in vaudeville, pulling down an astronomical $9,000 a week on the stage. A childhood friend, Moses Horwitz (a.k.a. Moe Howard), had briefly joined Healy, born Ernest Nash, on the stage in the mid-1910s when both were just teenagers before they split. Healy developed a revue with a cast including his wife, acrobats and singers. When the tumblers left his act, Healy thought of a comedy routine where hecklers in the audience were invited on the stage. Moe answered an ad Healy placed in the local paper, and the pair's working relationship was renewed. Moe's older brother, Shemp, later joined Healy's act in 1924 after he too proved to be a great heckler. The trio's on and off schtick eventually brought a fourth comedian to the team, Larry Fine, the lead performer at a popular Chicago nightclub. Called "Ted Healy & the Southern Gentlemen," they were hired by Fox Films to star in September 1930's "Soup to Nuts." The movie was the film debut for Healy and the soon-to-be-named 'The Three Stooges.'

    Healy is a costume attire salesman who likes to hang out at the local fire station, where the stooges work. A love triangle develops between Healy and businessman Carlson (Stanley Smith), vying for the interests of a bankrupt inventor's niece, Louise (Lucile Browne). Wedged amongst a number of comic sketches at the fire house with the stooges and the finale where they respond to a fire in which Louise is trapped in, Healy and Carlson battle one another for her loving cup.

    Fox Films loved the Howards' and Fine's repertoire in "Soup to Nuts" so much the studio offered them a contract. Healy, left out of the offer, argued with the studio the three comics were under his employ. And he refused to release them. The trio split from Healy and went on their own way. Performing as 'The Three Lost Soles' and 'Howard, Fine, and Howard,' they joined the RKO vaudeville circuit, taking on Jack Walsh as their straight man. Meanwhile, Healy hired three replacements, which weren't nearly as talented as the Howards/Fine package.

    Two years later, with Moe as the act's business manager, Healy, not happy with the stooges' replacements, ate crow and approached them to appear in a Jacob Shubert's theatre revue. Moe, crunching the numbers, saw Healy's financial position was strong with the Shubert contact. The three joined Healy in July 1932, only to see Shemp walk out after several rehearsals. Moe's older brother was tired of Healy's temper, drinking and abusive behavior and accepted an offer with Vitaphone Studios. Moe and Larry stuck with Healy, and convinced Moe's younger brother, Jerry, to join them. In the next year, Healy inked a movie contract with MGM, where he and the three sidekicks, including newbie Jerry, who took the stage name Curly, began to really gain the attention of a nationwide audience.
    6planktonrules

    Not especially funny but still well worth seeing.

    "Soup to Nuts" is far from a brilliant comedy and I only scored it a mediocre 6. So why do I STILL recommend you see it? Well, it's because it is important historically, as it's the first Three Stooges film...of sorts. I say 'of sorts' because it's not exactly the Stooges you might expect. While many will remember Curly as one of the original Stooges, this really isn't the case. His older brother, Shemp, was originally one of the Four Stooges. Four? Well, I'll get to that in a second. As for Curly, he replaced Shemp as Shemp had film offers on his own and only returned to the Stooges after Curly had a stroke in 1946. Now about the four....for a brief time, Fred Sanborn played a mute Stooge...sort of like a Harpo Marx character. But after making "From Soup to Nuts" he, like Shemp, went out on his own...in this case to pursue his musical career. Additionally, through their stage act to about 1933, the Stooges were billed as Ted Healy and His Stooges. After completing this film for Fox, the group went to MGM, briefly, and Moe, Larry and Curly soon left to go to Columbia and their careers took off. As for Healy, he stayed with MGM and was beaten to death outside a nightclub only a few years later.

    So, if you want to see the earliest incarnation of the Stooges on film, "Soup to Nuts" is it....though the style sure isn't what you'd expect from the boys. Ted Healy is THE act and Moe, Larry and Shemp really have little to do and Moe isn't the boss...so they all slap each other or get slapped by Healy. As for Sanborn, despite soon leaving the group, he received much more screen time than Moe, Larry and Shemp...much more. He was occasionally funny.

    The plot seems only ancillary to all the weirdness and high energy. Otto owns a costume shop and it's a financial mess...so much so that the company is being taken over by creditors. The man's daughter is angry and hates the man who has come to run things....though he's actually a nice guy and helps the family tremendously...though it took the entire film for her to realize it. In the interim, there's a lot of silliness, some Rube Goldberg style inventions and a bit of music. All in all, reasonably pleasant but a bit incoherent when it comes to plot.

    By the way, if you do watch, note a couple other actors in the film. In the restaurant scene, note the rotund guy. He's Mack Swain, the foil for Chaplin in many of his films, including "The Gold Rush". Also, the 'baby' doing summersaults is actually 6 year-old Billy Barty.
    5bobc-5

    Vaudeville on film - its weaknesses are also its strengths

    What we appear to have here are some vaudeville comedians trying to bring their acts to the screen assisted by a story from comic strip artist Rube Goldberg. It doesn't seem likely that any of them knew much about making movies no matter how good they may have been at making people laugh in their normal venues. The result is a mostly haphazard collection of lame gags with a few totally inane scenes thrown in for "plot" development. It isn't a total loss, however, because this fundamental weakness turns out also to be the film's greatest strength. Not knowing what they were doing, they manage to create a movie with a truly unusual and unique approach to film comedy. No matter how bad it may be, there are a few moments of hilarity delivered in a style you'll not see anywhere else.

    What really makes this worthwhile for most viewers, however, is it being the film debut of the 3 Stooges. Their skit near the end of the movie is basically a filmed vaudeville routine and is quite a bit different from the familiar act they eventually developed for their later shorts, but it's probably the closest we'll ever come to seeing what they originally looked like when performing on stage (and our only chance to see bizarre "fourth stooge" Fred Sanborn). No 3 Stooges fan should ever consider passing up the opportunity to see this.

    Let me also say that many of the other reviews here seem very unfair to Ted Healy, the Stooges original leader. From what I've read, the Stooges always thought very highly of his talents, but eventually got tired of his drunken binges and not being given the credit (or money) they deserved. In fact, it was after an early split with Healy that Shemp refused to return to work for him, thus requiring younger brother Curly to be brought in as a replacement (although much maligned by Stooge fans, Shemp does go on to be the only one of them with a successful film career independent of being a stooge). Healy, a big vaudeville star, seemed on his way to becoming a big film star before being killed in a bar fight during one of his drunken binges. Having never had the chance to see him in vaudeville, it hardly seems fair to judge him based on a few movies he made while still learning how to make the transition.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      First appearance of Shemp Howard with The Three Stooges, and his last appearance with the group until he rejoined them in 1947.
    • Goofs
      When Ted and the Stooges leave after breaking the window of a tailor shop, the stuttering tailor yells "You have to buy me a new mirror", rather than "window".
    • Quotes

      Fireman Shemp: It was so hot last night, I had to get up and take off my socks.

    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      Tears
      (1930) (uncredited)

      Written by Moe Howard, Shemp Howard, Larry Fine and Fred Sanborn

      Sung by Moe Howard, Shemp Howard and Larry Fine at the firehouse

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 28, 1930 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • YouTube - Video
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Rube Goldberg's Soup to Nuts
    • Production company
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 10m(70 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.20 : 1

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