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IMDbPro

In the Dough

  • 1933
  • Not Rated
  • 22m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
128
YOUR RATING
Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle in In the Dough (1933)
SlapstickComedyShort

Slim starts his first day of work at a bakery on the same day that local gangsters pay a visit to his boss demanding protection money. When the boss refuses to pay, the gangsters hatch a pla... Read allSlim starts his first day of work at a bakery on the same day that local gangsters pay a visit to his boss demanding protection money. When the boss refuses to pay, the gangsters hatch a plan to destr0y the bakery, but the plan doesn't quite work out the way they thought it would... Read allSlim starts his first day of work at a bakery on the same day that local gangsters pay a visit to his boss demanding protection money. When the boss refuses to pay, the gangsters hatch a plan to destr0y the bakery, but the plan doesn't quite work out the way they thought it would.

  • Director
    • Ray McCarey
  • Writer
    • Jack Henley
  • Stars
    • Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
    • Dan Coleman
    • Ethel Davis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    128
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ray McCarey
    • Writer
      • Jack Henley
    • Stars
      • Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
      • Dan Coleman
      • Ethel Davis
    • 7User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos9

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    Top cast12

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    Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
    Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
    • Slim
    Dan Coleman
    Dan Coleman
    • Mr. Shultz
    • (uncredited)
    Ethel Davis
    Ethel Davis
      Fred Harper
      • Mr. Smith
      • (uncredited)
      Shemp Howard
      Shemp Howard
      • Bugs
      • (uncredited)
      Fritz Hubert
        Marie Marion
        • Bakery Clerk
        • (uncredited)
        Dexter McReynolds
          Lawrence O'Sullivan
            Ralph Sanford
            Ralph Sanford
            • Cop
            • (uncredited)
            Lionel Stander
            Lionel Stander
            • Toots
            • (uncredited)
            Gracie Worth
            • Maisie
            • (uncredited)
            • Director
              • Ray McCarey
            • Writer
              • Jack Henley
            • All cast & crew
            • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

            User reviews7

            6.4128
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            Featured reviews

            F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

            Light flaky crust

            "In the Dough" is very funny. It's one of the six short comedies that Roscoe Arbuckle filmed at Warner Brothers' Vitaphone studio in Brooklyn in the early talkie era. The funniest of these is "Buzzin' Around", but "In the Dough" is a close second in hilarity. Roscoe is at the top of his form, and Shemp Howard (the sometime Stooge) is funny here too.

            Roscoe applies for a job in a bakery. When asked why he wants to be a baker, Roscoe grins broadly and replies: "Because I knead the dough."

            Just when Roscoe is mixing a big vat of dough, along comes a hoodlum running a protection racket, played by the gifted comic actor Lionel Stander. One thing leads to six others, and soon Roscoe and Lionel have begun a bitter battle in the boiling biscuit batter. I usually don't see anything funny about actors getting splattered with sticky goo, but "In the Dough" is an exception.

            There's a nice running gag about a Karl LaFong-ish customer who orders a birthday cake with very specific decorations: he wants "a large 'S' ... a capital 'S'." But this gag has been re-used by other comedians, so you probably know the punchline.

            When I saw "In the Dough" at the American Museum of the Moving Image, with an audience full of New Yorkers, most of the audience members laughed at a stock shot of a police car stopping near a billboard for the Greenpoint Savings Bank. Apparently this is funny to New Yorkers.

            The same stock shot turned up in another of Arbuckle's Vitaphone movies, and the audience laughed even harder the second time it showed up.

            "In the Dough" was directed by Ray McCarey, brother of comedy legend Leo McCarey. While definitely not as talented as his brother, Ray McCarey made some excellent films and he deserves to be remembered as an efficient comedy director in his own right.
            8tavm

            In the Dough was Fatty Arbuckle's last film

            This turned to be the very last film Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle made in his lifetime as he died of a heart attack the next day. But watching this, he's as alert and funny as ever as here, he's a baker who's hired on the spot. Unfortunately, it also means he has to deal with a couple of gangsters...I really liked the slapstick scenes involving Arbuckle, Lionel Stander, and Shemp Howard, the latter two playing the gangsters. There's plenty of funny gags involving dough, which door to go through in order to prevent accidents of bumping into each other, and at least one involving an explosion. So on that note, I recommend In the Dough.
            5planktonrules

            It makes you miss the wonderful old Fatty Arbuckle films.

            After Fatty Arbuckle was acquitted of a rape charge after an infamous trial in the 1920s, the once super-famous comedian was practically unemployable for several years. To get around this, he switched from acting to directing and used a fake name (William Goodrich) on his films. Later, just before his early death, Vitaphone decided to give Fatty another chance and featured him in a few shorts. I have not seen the others but this one is far from the wonderful Fatty Arbuckle films of the past.

            The problem with this film is that it relies on slapstick. Even during the slapstick era, Arbuckle rarely resorted to cheap laughs. But the entire final portion of the film is a variation on the old pie fight--with Fatty and some jerks throwing dough and cakes at each other. Funny? Not really. And not nearly as charming and sweet as his earlier pictures. Not entirely bad but far from his best work.
            Michael_Elliott

            Decet Arbuckle Comedy

            In the Dough (1933)

            ** 1/2 (out of 4)

            A bakery store owner has a group of gangster show up wanting money for "protection" but he refuses. That same day a man named Slim (Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle) shows up wanting the job of the baker. Soon the new baker goes up against the gangsters. IN THE DOUGH was the next-to-last film for Arbuckle who gets several good moments here even if the film itself isn't really that good. It's clear that this was meant as a throwback to his Keystone days because a lot of the humor comes from dough throwing. If you've seen at least one Keystone short then you've probably seen some sort of food fight and that tradition pretty much carries on here as we get at least two different and long sequences dealing with dough being thrown around. These scenes are certainly funny in their own right but the film really doesn't offer too much else. The entire subplot of gangsters threatening someone for money had been done countless times even by 1933 and there's really nothing new done with it. There's an ongoing gag dealing with a man who keeps wanting a larger cake but the final pay-off really isn't that funny. Arbuckle is certainly the main reason to watch this as he appears to be having a good time and there's no question that he's charming enough in the part. One of the gangsters is played by Shemp Howard so fans of his will also want to check this out.
            7redryan64

            Some Post Mortem Laughs For His Movie Fans........

            WE BELIEVE THAT it was Mark Twain who is credited with saying that: "A Lie can get half way around the World before the Truth can even get its shoes on."

            NO WHERE IS this more applicable than in the case of famed Comedian of the Silent Film days than Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle. The huge funny-man had his career ruined (and probably his life expectancy abruptly curtailed) following some flimsy accusation of rape from a film "starlet"; who later died of a ruptured bladder. Virginia Rappe had been known to have frequently made such claims before against several others.

            AFTER UNDERGOING THREE trials (the first two had ended with hung juries) Arbuckle had these charges dismissed against him with an apology from the Judge & Jury. The whole legal episode was supposedly the responsibility of newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst and some other Yellow Journalists; who hated Arbuckle and the Hollywood establishment in general.

            TODAY'S REVIEWED FILM, this two reeler sound short, IN THE DOUGH (Vitaphone/Warner Brothers, 1933) was the penultimate installment in what was an outstanding comeback effort. The great film comic tragically passed away before its release in 1933.

            AS FOR THE movie itself, it was overall a sample of a sort of standard fare of the day. Its threadbare premise is more than sufficient as a framework and backdrop for the story. In short; a baker is being victimized by a gang of extortionists; who are headed up by Lionel Stander and Shemp Howard. Arbuckle answers the "help wanted-baker" window sign and gets entangled in the crossfire. An ongoing additional gag is thrown in with a prim, proper and prissy man who insists on certain specifics ion a made to order cake.

            WITH THE APPEARANCE of a young, but tough female, who turns out to be the gun moll of the gang, the story hits its zenith of ultimate action, plot twists and merriment.

            IT IS FORTUNATE on our part to be able to screen such film rarities on our home computers; this one being courtesy of our friends at Youtube.com.

            JUST WHAT HEIGHTS that Mr. Roscoe Arbuckle could have achieved in this early sound era comeback will never be known. He remains a most tragic figure in the checkered history of Tinsel Town; having "cashed in his chips" at the age of 46!

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            Related interests

            Leslie Nielsen in The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988)
            Slapstick
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            Short

            Storyline

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            Did you know

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            • Trivia
              This film was the last ever made by Roscoe Arbuckle, though not the last of his pictures to be released in theatres. He had acted in this and other short films for Vitaphone in hopes of reviving his movie career, which was derailed by scandal in the early 1920s. His final day of work on the picture, shot in Brooklyn, New York, was June 28, 1933. That evening, he went to a party with his wife at a popular Manhattan restaurant to celebrate his anniversary. In the early hours of the following morning, Arbuckle died in his sleep of a heart attack. He was 46. This film was released posthumously in November of that year.
            • Quotes

              Slim: Excuse me, I forgot something at the bakery.

              Maisie: What did you forget at the bakery?

              Slim: I forgot to stay there!

            • Connections
              Edited into Happy Times and Jolly Moments (1943)

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            Details

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            • Release date
              • November 25, 1933 (United States)
            • Country of origin
              • United States
            • Language
              • English
            • Also known as
              • Big V Comedies (1933-1934) #5: In the Dough
            • Filming locations
              • Vitaphone Studios, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
            • Production company
              • Warner Bros.
            • See more company credits at IMDbPro

            Tech specs

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            • Runtime
              • 22m
            • Color
              • Black and White
            • Sound mix
              • Mono
            • Aspect ratio
              • 1.37 : 1

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