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A Chump at Oxford

  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 2m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
A Chump at Oxford (1940)
Home Video Trailer from Media Home Entertainment
Play trailer1:25
1 Video
84 Photos
ComedyFamily

As a reward for capturing a bank robber, Stan and Ollie get scholarships to Oxford, but are met with resentment by other students.As a reward for capturing a bank robber, Stan and Ollie get scholarships to Oxford, but are met with resentment by other students.As a reward for capturing a bank robber, Stan and Ollie get scholarships to Oxford, but are met with resentment by other students.

  • Director
    • Alfred J. Goulding
  • Writers
    • Charley Rogers
    • Felix Adler
    • Harry Langdon
  • Stars
    • Stan Laurel
    • Oliver Hardy
    • Forrester Harvey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    4.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alfred J. Goulding
    • Writers
      • Charley Rogers
      • Felix Adler
      • Harry Langdon
    • Stars
      • Stan Laurel
      • Oliver Hardy
      • Forrester Harvey
    • 44User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    A Chump At Oxford
    Trailer 1:25
    A Chump At Oxford

    Photos84

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Stan Laurel
    Stan Laurel
    • Stan Laurel…
    Oliver Hardy
    Oliver Hardy
    • Oliver Hardy
    Forrester Harvey
    Forrester Harvey
    • Meredith
    Wilfred Lucas
    Wilfred Lucas
    • Dean Williams
    Forbes Murray
    Forbes Murray
    • Banker
    Frank Baker
    Frank Baker
    • Jenkins - the Dean's Servant
    Eddie Borden
    Eddie Borden
    • Student Ghost
    Gerald Rogers
    • Student Johnson
    Victor Kendall
    • Student Cecil
    Gerald Fielding
    • Student Brown
    Charlie Hall
    Charlie Hall
    • Student Hector
    • (as Charles Hall)
    Peter Cushing
    Peter Cushing
    • Student Jones
    Evelyn Barlow
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    Louise Bates
    Louise Bates
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    Harry Bernard
    Harry Bernard
    • Policeman Shot by Vandervere
    • (uncredited)
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • Policeman
    • (uncredited)
    Tom Costello
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Cramer
    Richard Cramer
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Alfred J. Goulding
    • Writers
      • Charley Rogers
      • Felix Adler
      • Harry Langdon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews44

    7.24.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8Vincentb341

    Stan, the English lord

    In 1940, Laurel and Hardy made their last two movies for Hal Roach, A Chump At Oxford and Saps At Sea. Oxford is the better film, but both are entertaining. In any case, this was the last time the pair had any creative input regarding their own films. (At MGM and Fox, they were handed a script and told to do it "the studio way.")

    A Chump At Oxford is really two movies in one. The opening shot shows Stan and Ollie hitchhiking to an employment agency. The only job that's open requires a maid and butler team, so for the second time in his career (the first was in Another Fine Mess), Stan plays Agnes the maid. What follows is a partial re-make of another short, From Soup to Nuts (in fact, as dinner is about to be served, Ollie announces, "We've got everything from soup to nuts.") Stan once again serves the salad undressed, but he is also drunk, having taken Mr. Vanderveer's (Jimmy Finlayson) instruction to "Take all those cocktails" a bit too literally. He chases them out of the house with a shotgun, shooting a policeman in the derriere along the way.

    In the next scene, Ollie and Stan are sweeping streets. Ollie, usually the eternal optimist, is more depressed here than in any L & H film. "Well, here we are, right back down in the gutter. We're just as good as other people, but we don't advance ourselves. We never get anywhere." They decide to attend night school, but their fortunes change sooner than they expect. Like W.C. Fields in The Bank Dick, they (quite accidentally) capture a couple of bank robbers. As Ollie explains that they have no education, the bank manager rewards them with the finest education money can buy, at Oxford University.

    Arriving in England, our friends are preyed upon by a dreary crowd of students, among them old nemesis Charley Hall and a very young Peter Cushing. They play childish pranks on the boys, getting them lost for hours in a weird-looking maze, and dressing up like a ghost to scare them to death. Soon after they arrive, Stan makes it very clear that he is out of his element.

    Johnson (Peter Cushing): Haven't you come to the wrong college? You're dressed for Eton (the famous British prep school).

    Stan: Why, that's swell, we haven't eaten since breakfast, have we Ollie?

    The worst prank of all is when Johnson disguises himself as the dean and directs them to the real dean's rooms, telling them that these are their quarters. When the dean (Wilfred Lucas) returns and the students are caught, he tells them they will all be expelled. They vow to take revenge against Stan and Ollie.

    Shown to their proper quarters, the boys meet their valet Meredith (Forrester Harvey). He refers to Stan as Your Lordship, stating that before a window came down on his head and he wandered away, he was the greatest athlete and scholar in the history of Oxford, and "oh, what a brilliant mind." When Ollie hears this, he bursts into laughter. "Why I've known him for years and he's the dumbest guy I ever met."

    Meanwhile the expelled students are heading for their lodgings singing a bizarre "chant of revenge." As Stan looks out the window, it crashes down on his head, and he becomes Lord Paddington. As the students enter his room, His Lordship fights them all, throwing them all out the window (in a rather cruel weight joke, he throws Ollie out, too, and he makes a huge crater in the ground when he lands.)

    A certificate on the wall informs us that Lord Paddington has been reestablished as the leading scholar/athlete at the University. He speaks like a cultured English gentleman, and Ollie is now his valet. (This is not too hard to understand when you consider that Stan was the creative genius of the team, writing many of the gags we see in the films.) Ollie is now a humiliated figure, and no other actor can use camera looks to express humiliation like Oliver Hardy. At one point, the dean comes in to tell Paddington that Professor Einstein has arrived from America and is a bit confused about his theory. Could he straighten him out? Ollie is incredibly shocked, muttering under his breath, "If it wasn't for that bump on the head, he wouldn't know Einstein from a beer stein." But he's helpless to do anything about it.
    bob the moo

    Gentle, slow comedy from the famous duo

    Oliver and Stan are yet again down on their luck. A temporary job as a butler and a maid ends in disaster leaving them sweeping the streets. When they foil a bank robbery they get sent to Oxford as a reward to get an education. At Oxford they are targeted for pranks by the other students until a bump on the head reveals Stan's family background.

    The story isn't very important - the various episodes aren't always very well linked and are really only excuses for a series of set pieces. However it doesn't mean it's bad. Each bit stands up in it's own right and you don't really notice the tenuous links. Each contains some very funny moments and it's typical of the duo's slow gentle comedy. The only concern I would have is that film comedy now is of the type that must move very quickly, be very crude and be very simple - I don't think audiences raised on "something about mary" style films would all appreciate this film at all.

    All the performances are good (with only a few dodgy accents). Laurel and Hardy are good in their well practised roles. James Finlayson is good at his usual squinty, double taking stuff and there's an interesting early role for Peter Cushing.

    Overall a little comedy that is slow and gentle - just don't expect the world in terms of plot or belly laughs.
    8JoeytheBrit

    A Last Hurrah

    This is probably the last consistently funny comedy produced by the duo and, although it's always enjoyable to watch, there's no real stand-out moments as there had been in most of their films of the thirties. Stan's beginning to look a little long in the tooth in his close-ups but he still manages to capture that sweet childlike quality, and there's more evidence of a real friendship between the characters in this film than there were in earlier films.

    The first 20 minutes, apparently added for its European release, are basically a remake of the duo's silent comedy From Soup to Nuts with a few ideas from Another Fine Mess, and you can pretty much see the join but that doesn't detract from the enjoyment. James Finlayson, the boys classic foil, appears in this early sequence. The action then transfers to Oxford (the film's a parody of Robert Taylor's A Yank at Oxford from the previous year) where the boys find themselves mercilessly teased by the other students. This is where the film is funniest - it's surprising how many laughs can be wrung from two men wandering around a maze for 20 minutes. It's also surprising how well this film stands up to childhood memories of a non-stop hoot; while the laughs might not quite be non-stop, they still came pretty regularly to this old kid...
    9RussianPantyHog

    Stan & Ollie at their best. Hilarious.

    What a lovely gentle comedy. Laurel & Hardy are down on their luck after spectacularly failing as domestic servants (with Stan in drag as a maid) and find themselves literally "in the gutter" working as road-sweepers. They accidentally foil a bank robbery and the grateful bank manager rewards them with the one thing they most dream of, "the best education money can buy". And so off they go to Oxford University, England where the students play a series of practical jokes on them until it's discovered Stan is really Lord Paddington, a brilliant academic who lost his memory several years earlier and vanished. Some of Laurel and Hardy's full-length movies lack the brilliance of their "shorts" but this is spot on throughout. Trust me, you won't stop laughing. Hard to believe this film is now 65 years old, but it still shines. The "Oxford" scenes were shot in Hollywood as we British were rather pre-occupied in 1940 and it's kind of poignant to reflect on the terrible evil that was loose in the world while this lovely film was being created. This movie is a wonderful anglo-American co-operation just like the military alliance which, thankfully, meant that comedy could continue. I recently heard Laurel and hardy described as two very gentle gentlemen, and that sums up my feelings. God bless them both, and long may their legacy continue to bring laughter. Look out for a very young Peter Cushing as one of the spiteful students.
    9hitchcockthelegend

    Firstly Stan is Agnes, then the mighty Lord Paddington.

    This is Stan Laurel's show all the way, sure enough Ollie plays his part, but in this double package it's the genius of Laurel that comes to the fore. The double package in question is the now widely available European release of this film, the first 20 minutes sees the boys making their way to an employment agency where they jump at the chance of a job as maid and butler to the Vandevere family. Yes, this sees Stan dress up as a woman {Agnes} with hilarious results, not only does he buffoon his way thru serving dinner, he gets drunk into the bargain as well !. After being chased off the property by Mr Vandevere, the guys end up road sweeping and whilst taking a break they inadvertently foil a bank robbery and as a reward they get to fulfil their wish of a better education.

    This sends the guys to England and a place at Oxford, the fun starts straight away as they are dressed for Eton !, upon seeing that these two are candidates for pranks being played on them, some of their fellow students send them into a big maze on the bluff that it's the way to the Deans office. This sets us up for a number of great sequences, most notably a brilliant set of events that sees Stan with three hands, from here we see the boys set up {as a prank} in the Deans own quarters and this of course causes much mirth when the Dean shows up to find the guys boozing away in his bedroom. Roll onto Stan banging his head and suddenly being transformed into an aristocrat called Lord Paddington and you just know that Laurel is getting a pure mania role to get his teeth into, the results are excellent, especially as Stan gets to boss Ollie around.

    One of the best films the boys ever did in my honest opinion, 9/10.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Drew Barrymore and Pat Welsh in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
    Family

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      For the ear wiggling that Stan does, he would be filmed with his ears as normal then they'd be held forward with putty or similar material and the camera restarted. The two sections would be joined together then copied and joined many times for repetition. Filmed in slow motion then projected at normal speed the ears would wave vigorously. This would be why Stan's face is fixed in one position for a relatively long time.
    • Goofs
      When Stan and Ollie get out of a car and thank the driver for the lift, they are in front of the entrance for The Evening Globe, which has Art Deco trim around the main doors. They then ask the driver of a Water Dept. truck for a ride. When they sit on the back of the truck as the driver turns on the street-cleaning spray, the background has changed, and they are now in front of the Globe Pipe Shop, which is next to a grand building entrance with large, Ionic columns on either side of the doors.
    • Quotes

      Baldy Vandevere: [to Stan in drag] Agnus, will you please serve the salad - without any dressing.

      Stan: [walks over to Ollie] What kind of a joint is this?

      Ollie: What's the matter?

      Stan: He wants me to serve the salad undressed.

      Ollie: Well, if he wants the salad undressed, that's the way he'll have it. Go get the salad.

    • Alternate versions
      Shortenedand reedited as "Alter Ego" for TV consumption in the 59m
    • Connections
      Edited into Dance of the Cookoos (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      For He's a Jolly Good Fellow
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      Sung a cappella by Oxford students

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 16, 1940 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dos Bobos en Oxford
    • Filming locations
      • Canon Drive, Beverly Hills, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Hal Roach Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 2m(62 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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