1 review
When self-imagined Casanova Arthur Stone sleepwalks into Dorothy Granger's bed during a house party, her husband, Wade Boteler, reacts violently.
It has more of a plot than most of Mack Sennett's shorts did during this period, and some excellent comedy performances. I was rather disappointed in the cheap and obvious manner in which the thrill comedy ending was produced, but overall, it was a pretty good effort for Sennett during a very weak period in his production history; following the coming of sound and the depression in short comedy production, even Hal Roach, with his MGM contract, was having a hard time showing a profit, and the money Sennett had to spend, releasing through Educational, wasn't much.
See if you can spot a 15-year-old Betty Grable in the cast.
It has more of a plot than most of Mack Sennett's shorts did during this period, and some excellent comedy performances. I was rather disappointed in the cheap and obvious manner in which the thrill comedy ending was produced, but overall, it was a pretty good effort for Sennett during a very weak period in his production history; following the coming of sound and the depression in short comedy production, even Hal Roach, with his MGM contract, was having a hard time showing a profit, and the money Sennett had to spend, releasing through Educational, wasn't much.
See if you can spot a 15-year-old Betty Grable in the cast.