IMDb RATING
7.4/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Mr. Hardy is running for mayor but an old flame of ill repute shows up to blackmail him with an old naughty photograph.Mr. Hardy is running for mayor but an old flame of ill repute shows up to blackmail him with an old naughty photograph.Mr. Hardy is running for mayor but an old flame of ill repute shows up to blackmail him with an old naughty photograph.
Mae Busch
- Ollie's Old Flame
- (uncredited)
Baldwin Cooke
- Office Worker
- (uncredited)
Gordon Douglas
- Passerby Outside Apartment
- (uncredited)
Norma Drew
- Mrs. Laurel
- (uncredited)
James Finlayson
- Butler
- (uncredited)
Elizabeth Forrester
- Passerby Outside Apartment
- (uncredited)
Charles K. French
- Judge
- (uncredited)
Clara Guiol
- Secretary
- (uncredited)
Frank Holliday
- Mr. Holliday
- (uncredited)
Ham Kinsey
- Mr. Kinsey
- (uncredited)
- …
Dorothy Layton
- Office Worker
- (uncredited)
Venice Lloyd
- Office Worker
- (uncredited)
Bob Minford
- Doorman
- (uncredited)
Patsy O'Byrne
- Busybody
- (uncredited)
Gertrude Pedlar
- Judge's Wife
- (uncredited)
Frank Rice
- Hardy's Dinner Servant
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia'Chickens Come Home' is a "three-reel' sound remake of the two-reel silent, 'Love 'Em And Weep' from 1927, which was also made at the Hal Roach Studios. Oliver Hardy (who had a bit part as a judge in the silent) plays the featured part, which was originally played by James Finlayson in the silent version. Finlayson is relegated to the small part of the butler in the sound version. Stan Laurel and Mae Busch play the same parts in both films.
- Goofs(At around 3 mins) The camera is on the notepad and the pencil that Laurel is holding breaks. We can see that Laurel only squiggled on the notepad rather than writing the words Hardy had told him to write. Those "squiggles" are in fact Shorthand, an abbreviated symbolic writing method that increases speed and brevity of writing as compared to a more common method of writing a language. Shorthand was used more widely in the past, before the invention of recording and dictation machines.
- Quotes
Stanley: Do you mind if I smoke?
Ollie's blackmailer: I don't care if you burn up!
- Alternate versionsThe version of this film available on DVD is a mediocre Film Classics reissue print in which the original MGM credits have been replaced and the title of the film is absent. The computer-colorized version features the original credits minus the MGM lion. The Spanish language version, "Politiquerías", features the full MGM credits and the lion as well.
- ConnectionsAlternate-language version of Politiquerías (1931)
Featured review
Chickens Come Home (1931)
*** (out of 4)
Hardy is ecstatic that he's in the running for Mayor but this joy soon turns to fear when a woman from his past shows up with a photo of the two that could cause trouble if it reaches the press. The woman, wanting money to keep quiet, tells Hardy to be at her house that night but the wannabe Mayor is having a dinner for various judges so he sends Laurel to do his dirty work. Laurel, being too weak to stop the woman, gets in trouble with his own wife who thinks he's having an affair but the real havoc occurs back at Hardy's house when the three meet head on.
Chickens Come Home isn't considered the best L&H short but it still manages to get some big laughs all the way to the outrageous end. The one thing that's always amazed me about the L&H shorts is, usually, they run towards the thirty-minute mark yet it feels as though these films run mere minutes due to the high energy level brought to the screen by the two stars. The story of blackmail isn't any original or new but the boys make it seem as fresh and full of life as if this had been the first time we've ever seen something like it.
The biggest highlight comes towards the end of the film when the boys must try and sneak the blackmailer out of the house without Hardy's wife finding out about the past. This little scene has the boys putting the woman on their back and making it appear she's walking out on her own. Another wonderful segment is when Laurel goes to the woman's house and does all in his will to keep her there. This includes a hilarious scene where he blocks the door with all sorts of items only to have her throwing the stuff back at his head. The dialogue is also very fresh and we get several laughs from it. The best moment is when Laurel asks the blackmailer if he can smoke and she tells him he can burn if he wishes.
*** (out of 4)
Hardy is ecstatic that he's in the running for Mayor but this joy soon turns to fear when a woman from his past shows up with a photo of the two that could cause trouble if it reaches the press. The woman, wanting money to keep quiet, tells Hardy to be at her house that night but the wannabe Mayor is having a dinner for various judges so he sends Laurel to do his dirty work. Laurel, being too weak to stop the woman, gets in trouble with his own wife who thinks he's having an affair but the real havoc occurs back at Hardy's house when the three meet head on.
Chickens Come Home isn't considered the best L&H short but it still manages to get some big laughs all the way to the outrageous end. The one thing that's always amazed me about the L&H shorts is, usually, they run towards the thirty-minute mark yet it feels as though these films run mere minutes due to the high energy level brought to the screen by the two stars. The story of blackmail isn't any original or new but the boys make it seem as fresh and full of life as if this had been the first time we've ever seen something like it.
The biggest highlight comes towards the end of the film when the boys must try and sneak the blackmailer out of the house without Hardy's wife finding out about the past. This little scene has the boys putting the woman on their back and making it appear she's walking out on her own. Another wonderful segment is when Laurel goes to the woman's house and does all in his will to keep her there. This includes a hilarious scene where he blocks the door with all sorts of items only to have her throwing the stuff back at his head. The dialogue is also very fresh and we get several laughs from it. The best moment is when Laurel asks the blackmailer if he can smoke and she tells him he can burn if he wishes.
- Michael_Elliott
- Mar 13, 2008
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Chicken Come Home
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color
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