Swept up in a police raid, Stan and Ollie are sentenced to jail and land in a jail labor camp. The governor visits, accompanied by two flappers, where the duo accidentally create rice puddin... Read allSwept up in a police raid, Stan and Ollie are sentenced to jail and land in a jail labor camp. The governor visits, accompanied by two flappers, where the duo accidentally create rice pudding for a food fight.Swept up in a police raid, Stan and Ollie are sentenced to jail and land in a jail labor camp. The governor visits, accompanied by two flappers, where the duo accidentally create rice pudding for a food fight.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Prisoner
- (uncredited)
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
- Prisoner
- (uncredited)
- Prisoner
- (uncredited)
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
- Prisoner
- (uncredited)
- Prisoner
- (uncredited)
- Prisoner
- (uncredited)
- Prisoner
- (uncredited)
- Governor
- (uncredited)
- Treetop Lookout
- (uncredited)
- Prisoner
- (uncredited)
- Prison Camp Officer
- (uncredited)
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
- Prison Guard
- (uncredited)
- Director
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Featured reviews
Any short film that needs a great deal of set up before it actually starts going anywhere, is asking for trouble. On the surface that may not totally be the case here but I suspect it is one of it's weaknesses. The plot here sounds good but it has a few little unnecessary things that are needed to get it to it's original idea (I assume) which is the prison gang.
Once it reaches this stage it is funny but never feels like it reaches a peak. Individual moments are good but it doesn't have any really good sequences I found the rice fight to be so-so rather than hilarious I'm afraid.
Laurel and Hardy are good of course but they seem to be hampered by a film that requires them to do things that aren't funny just to set up a joke that is funny. This split of time is almost 50/50 so the result is that the film doesn't seem to be as full and lively as their shorts are normally. Finlayson is usually my favourite support actor in the Laurel and Hardy shorts but here he doesn't get to do his trademark moves and is more of a straight man than a part of the comedy.
Overall this is still worth watching but I thought it was one of those rare occasions where the duo simply couldn't stretch the central idea to cover the whole short.
This early talkie is rather unpolished in construction, but Stan & Ollie are always fun to watch. Slapstick humor abounds, especially in the finale. James Finlayson plays the Governor.
And the opening title card---"Neither Mr. Laurel or Mr. Hardy had any thoughts of doing wrong. As a matter of fact,they had no thoughts of any kind".
Enormous Tiny Sandford is given the chore of guarding the boys on the work gang, and he takes the brunt of the abuse(gooey soup poured on his shoes;but only after it's been overloaded with pepper).
Actually,putting rice in the radiator IS a good way to stop a leak----but science takes a back seat to laughs and loss of dignity.
And their first prison film wasn't this one,but 1927's THE SECOND HUNDRED YEARS.
"The Hoose-gow" was Laurel & Hardy's sixth talkie short and a step in the right direction in recovering the energy and verve of their best silent shorts. Shot almost entirely outdoors, this film doesn't have the claustrophobic, studio-bound feel that hindered some of their earlier talkies. The sound mix must have had some level of sophistication. Look at some of the road crew scenes. The wind is whipping up the branches on some of bushes right behind them. With the microphones of the time, that dialogue must've been unusable. The dubbing was fine.
The plot of the film is simple but serviceable. Nothing new, but nice. It works its way to a nice, rice throwing battle, which, if not on the level of "Two Tars" or "Big Business," is certainly adequate. The supporting cast is good, featuring the always reliable Tiny Sanford and James Finlayson.
Not a classic, but worth watching. Up to this point, their best talkie with the possible exception of "Men O'War."
It doesn't take the Boys long to turn a visit from governor Jimmy Finlayson into absolute chaos, with a mud fight that recalls the pie-fight finale from BATTLE OF THE CENTURY. This doesn't add anything new to the franchise. It's simply a typically brilliantly executed series of fun.
The IMDb trivia for this short claims the song played at the start of this picture is "Ain't She Sweet." It's actually "That's My Weakness Now."
Did you know
- TriviaOliver Hardy was injured during the filming of the scene in which Stan Laurel keeps nicking him with a pickaxe. A rubber pickaxe was originally to have been used for the scene, but it was decided that it looked too fake, in action, so a real one was substituted. Hardy moved a little too close to Laurel during the latter's backswing and received a very real cut from the pickaxe on his rear.
- GoofsAt the end of the film the car backs into the truck, just before the impact two barrels of whitewash tip over.
- Quotes
Title Card: Neither Mr. Laurel nor Mr. Hardy had any thoughts of doing wrong - As a matter of fact, they had no thoughts of any kind
- Alternate versionsThere is also a colorized version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Crazy World of Laurel and Hardy (1966)
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- Runtime
- 21m
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