The stooges are tricked into becoming stowaways by their neighbor "Borscht", a spy for an enemy country. Stranded on a freighter on the high seas, they discover that their friend has conceal... Read allThe stooges are tricked into becoming stowaways by their neighbor "Borscht", a spy for an enemy country. Stranded on a freighter on the high seas, they discover that their friend has concealed some stolen microfilm in watermelons they brought aboard for him. After a wild chase, t... Read allThe stooges are tricked into becoming stowaways by their neighbor "Borscht", a spy for an enemy country. Stranded on a freighter on the high seas, they discover that their friend has concealed some stolen microfilm in watermelons they brought aboard for him. After a wild chase, they subdue Borscht and recover the microfilm.
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Featured reviews
The Boys Just Sang For The 'Halibut'
Actor Gene Roth wasn't a name I recognized but I sure remembered his voice as a guy who had played villains more than once in Three Stooges films. He was a big guy with a gruff voice, like Vernon Dent who starred in many Stooges films. When posting this review, I looked up Roth's resume and it's amazing; the man did a lot of work with many guest shots on very popular TV shows in the 1950s and 1960s.
Anyway, here we have the old microfilm-hidden-in-the-watermelon angle, something I've seen before in some previous Stooges war movies (or I've just seen this movie several times and didn't remember). Roth plays a Russian spy named "Mr. Bortch" who hid the film and uses the boys to carry the melons on board a ship. There, they wind up stowaways and all the gags are what happens in the small room they are in.
They pass the time getting seasick, banging either other on the head or making corny jokes like:
"We were known as 'The Fish Market Duet.' "
The'Fish Market Duet'?
"Yeah, we sang for the halibut!"
Anyway, the real action starts when the boys figure out their friend is not whom they think he is....and the fight is on!
everything fits
I saw Commotion on the Ocean (1956) before watching this. I think I like this one slightly better. It makes more sense that the boys trust Bortch due to being his neighbor and being their simple idiot self. They have a good costar. Everything fits in this one.
One of the best shorts ever!
This surely is one of the best Three Stooges shorts ever made for Columbia Pictures. Also, Gene Roth did a pretty good job on his accent as well as portraying Borscht. This also seems to be one of the few shorts in which the Three Stooges appear with only one actor. If there was any favorite short during the Shemp era, It's ought to be this short. This short deserves a well positive review.
Good Stooges short! Gene Roth is excellent in this one!
This is one of My favorite Three Stooges shorts! Gene Roth is excellent in it! The scenes with the Stooges especially with Shemp are really funny! The scene where Roth is chasing Shemp is hilarious! There is another Three Stooges short with alternate scenes called Commotion on the Ocean. This is really an underrated Stooges short!
Stooges' Espionage Film is a Parody on the 'Pumpkin Papers'
Gene Stutenroth, who shortened his name to Gene Roth, plays the Soviet agent in "Dunked in the Deep." The soon-to-be actor was a successful businessman visiting Universal studio to watch a movie in progress when a member of the film crew spotted him, thinking he looked like a friend of German dictator Adolf Hitler. Gene was in high demand during and after WW2, eventually appearing in over 250 films and TV shows. Of all the roles he had played, his most famous line was delivered to Shemp who had the microfilm in "Dunked in the Deep," "Giff me dat fill-um!" ("give me that film" with a Russian accent.). Shemp had hurt his hand while opening a door while filming, and yes, that's Moe's voice on the radio in the movie's opening.
Did you know
- TriviaAt the beginning of the episode the voice heard on the radio is Moe's Howard.
- GoofsThe long shot of the ship is reversed, making the lettering on the name read backwards.
- ConnectionsEdited from The Captain Hates the Sea (1934)
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- Runtime
- 17m
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- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1






