Joe McDoakes and his wife go apartment hunting.Joe McDoakes and his wife go apartment hunting.Joe McDoakes and his wife go apartment hunting.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
Art Gilmore
- Narrator
- (voice)
Creighton Hale
- Wallpaper Hanger
- (uncredited)
Jane Harker
- Alice McDoakes
- (uncredited)
Fred Kelsey
- Apartment Manager with a Vacancy
- (uncredited)
Mike Lally
- Clerk
- (uncredited)
Jack Lomas
- Man in Cramped Bed
- (uncredited)
Charles Marsh
- Shaymus O'Shaymus
- (uncredited)
Paul Panzer
- Wallpaper Hanger
- (uncredited)
Ted Stanhope
- J. Phineas McNasty
- (uncredited)
Clifton Young
- Homer Hotbox
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
I Know That You Know
The swingy version of that song starts off this episode of the Warner Brothers' long-running short comedy series.... but it starts off every one of them, as George O'Hanlon and wife Jane Harker are evicted by their landlord and search desperately for a new apartment in rental-tight, post-war America.
It's a standard entry in the series, which means it is silly, absurd, and in an exaggerated way, concerns itself with the issues that confronted America in a changing time. That's probably why it lasted so long, closing down only in 1956, when television put an end to this sort of short subject by making them something you could see at home.
It's a standard entry in the series, which means it is silly, absurd, and in an exaggerated way, concerns itself with the issues that confronted America in a changing time. That's probably why it lasted so long, closing down only in 1956, when television put an end to this sort of short subject by making them something you could see at home.
Greedy landlord!!!
A hilarious comedy short involving a landlord scheming to evict his tenants and rent his apartments for more money. How would you like to lose a one hundred dollar bet on purpose to a landlord so you can get a vacant apartment only to find out the building is going to be knocked down the next day. This short is a gem!!!
That awful McNasty!
Joe and his wife are in a bind. Their awful landlord, Mr. McNasty, wants to evict them and put in tenants who are willing to pay his ridiculous prices. This is because during and just after WWII, there was a severe housing shortage and folks were stuck in a seller's market. The Joe McDoakes short is all about the many hoops Joe needs to jump through in order to get a new apartment...and at the end, he's paying $500 a month...a princely sum back in the 1940s!
This one has a lot of good gags. While all the McDoakes films were enjoyable and fun, this one is a standout because of the many excellent laughs as well as the silly ending. I don't want to say more...but this is among the best of the series.
This one has a lot of good gags. While all the McDoakes films were enjoyable and fun, this one is a standout because of the many excellent laughs as well as the silly ending. I don't want to say more...but this is among the best of the series.
J. PHINEAS McNASTY.
Thank you Richard L. Bare (GREEN ACRES) for this slice of madness, relatable to this day.
Historically (or hysterically) speaking, the story takes place during the notorious housing bust, following WWII. Both apartments and houses were difficult to find. Enter GREEEDY landlords who raised rents or evicted tenants (such is the case with McDoakes and his wife) to CASH IN.
George O'Hanlon and Jane Harker versus miserable landlord McNasty (Ted Stanhope at his meanest), and yes, some of the madness may have inspired the famous HONEYMOONERS episode. Ralph battled his landlord who raised the rent too. No power, no heat, no nothing!
Best Part; Within 11 minutes of outrageouness... They get scammed into getting back their old apartment, now remodeled? Joe's wallpaper had to have come from the THREE STOOGES school of art???
Good cast featuring hard-boiled Fred Kelsey, who appeared many times with Laurel & Hardy and the Stooges. TV buffs will recognized Stanhope, who guested on PERRY MASON, several westerns.
Indeed, to this day, landlords and paying rent could be a trip. Beware!
Episode #12. Remastered Warner Brothers dvd box set. Thanks TCM for the memories.
Historically (or hysterically) speaking, the story takes place during the notorious housing bust, following WWII. Both apartments and houses were difficult to find. Enter GREEEDY landlords who raised rents or evicted tenants (such is the case with McDoakes and his wife) to CASH IN.
George O'Hanlon and Jane Harker versus miserable landlord McNasty (Ted Stanhope at his meanest), and yes, some of the madness may have inspired the famous HONEYMOONERS episode. Ralph battled his landlord who raised the rent too. No power, no heat, no nothing!
Best Part; Within 11 minutes of outrageouness... They get scammed into getting back their old apartment, now remodeled? Joe's wallpaper had to have come from the THREE STOOGES school of art???
Good cast featuring hard-boiled Fred Kelsey, who appeared many times with Laurel & Hardy and the Stooges. TV buffs will recognized Stanhope, who guested on PERRY MASON, several westerns.
Indeed, to this day, landlords and paying rent could be a trip. Beware!
Episode #12. Remastered Warner Brothers dvd box set. Thanks TCM for the memories.
(Rented or Leased) "A Man's Home is ........" you know!
AMONG THE MANY other problems that post World War II America faced was a housing shortage. It seemed that situations rooted in the Depression Era allied themselves with the new phenomenon called "the Post War Baby Boom" in making life more difficult for the young Adults of "the Greatest Generation" (our parents) and the Boomers themselves(Guilty! I'm one!).
SO THE ONLY thing that our favourite production team of Hollingsworth (producer), Bare (Writer/Director) and O'Hanlon (Star & co-writer)was to pitch in by making us laugh at ourselves. While this may seem to be a trite and commonplace sort of observation, it does hold up quite well. In every comic situation there is at the core truth. This and the other Mc DOAKES are no exceptions.
OUR STORY BEGINS with Joe & Alice being at odds with their landlord; who is methodically vacating the apartment building ( the "Mc Nasty Arms") in order to do some major remodeling. We find that their electricity, gas and water have been turned off. (No Schultz, there was no Cable Television in 1948).
INCIDENTALLY, WE HAVE noticed that this "Tenant vs. Landlord" altercation predates the situation that occurs on Jackie Gleason's THE HONEYMOONERS sketch some several years later. (Just an observation, not a criticism).
BEING THE HARD headed man of the house, Joe brings in light via an extension cord light and they burn wood and paper in the oven range for cooking. but eventually, in a sort of "Trojan Horse" maneuver, the owner sneaks his summons bearing legal team in to the unit under cover of decorators.
SO THEN THE long process of obtaining a new home is begun. Once again, we are treated to a succession of failed showings of the incredibly overpriced and pathetically inadequate. The rentals run the whole spectrum of disappointing adjectives.
AS FOR THE final scene and wind-up, we find Joe &n Alice sitting at their dining room table with the same gaudy and imbecilic wallpaper behind them. We won't say anymore as that would ruin it for you. Make sure to view it yourself; as the entire series is available on DVD at a very reasonable.
IN PARTING WE'D like to say once again that this is a most highly under-appreciated series. It has certain elemental links to the earliest forms of screen comedy, namely the Silent short subjects made by guys like Chaplin, Keaton, Laurel & Hardy, Sennett and Lloyd. Among the series' greatest strengths is its being a leading proponent of the old "Sight Gag"; which is quite all right with us!
SO THE ONLY thing that our favourite production team of Hollingsworth (producer), Bare (Writer/Director) and O'Hanlon (Star & co-writer)was to pitch in by making us laugh at ourselves. While this may seem to be a trite and commonplace sort of observation, it does hold up quite well. In every comic situation there is at the core truth. This and the other Mc DOAKES are no exceptions.
OUR STORY BEGINS with Joe & Alice being at odds with their landlord; who is methodically vacating the apartment building ( the "Mc Nasty Arms") in order to do some major remodeling. We find that their electricity, gas and water have been turned off. (No Schultz, there was no Cable Television in 1948).
INCIDENTALLY, WE HAVE noticed that this "Tenant vs. Landlord" altercation predates the situation that occurs on Jackie Gleason's THE HONEYMOONERS sketch some several years later. (Just an observation, not a criticism).
BEING THE HARD headed man of the house, Joe brings in light via an extension cord light and they burn wood and paper in the oven range for cooking. but eventually, in a sort of "Trojan Horse" maneuver, the owner sneaks his summons bearing legal team in to the unit under cover of decorators.
SO THEN THE long process of obtaining a new home is begun. Once again, we are treated to a succession of failed showings of the incredibly overpriced and pathetically inadequate. The rentals run the whole spectrum of disappointing adjectives.
AS FOR THE final scene and wind-up, we find Joe &n Alice sitting at their dining room table with the same gaudy and imbecilic wallpaper behind them. We won't say anymore as that would ruin it for you. Make sure to view it yourself; as the entire series is available on DVD at a very reasonable.
IN PARTING WE'D like to say once again that this is a most highly under-appreciated series. It has certain elemental links to the earliest forms of screen comedy, namely the Silent short subjects made by guys like Chaplin, Keaton, Laurel & Hardy, Sennett and Lloyd. Among the series' greatest strengths is its being a leading proponent of the old "Sight Gag"; which is quite all right with us!
Did you know
- TriviaThis film reflects the acute housing shortage in the U.S. that existed for several years after World War II, as practically no residential construction occurred during the war and millions of returning servicemen and women looked to establish their own households.
- GoofsWhen the wallpaper hangers and McNasty enter the apartment, a shadow of the boom microphone is visible on the wall, top of the frame.
- ConnectionsFollowed by So You Want to Be a Gambler (1948)
- SoundtracksI Know That You Know
(uncredited)
Music by Vincent Youmans
[Played during the opening credits and at the end]
Details
- Runtime
- 11m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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