IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
1953
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuStan and Ollie try to hide their pet dog Laughing Gravy from their exasperated, mean tempered landlord, who has a "No Pets" policy.Stan and Ollie try to hide their pet dog Laughing Gravy from their exasperated, mean tempered landlord, who has a "No Pets" policy.Stan and Ollie try to hide their pet dog Laughing Gravy from their exasperated, mean tempered landlord, who has a "No Pets" policy.
Harry Bernard
- Policeman
- (Nicht genannt)
Charles Dorety
- Drunk
- (Nicht genannt)
Laughing Gravy
- Laughing Gravy - the Dog
- (Nicht genannt)
Charlie Hall
- Landlord
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
This is a very typical Laurel & Hardy short. It's filled with some typical and very well executed slapstick humor. This is a great example of how a Laurel & Hardy movie should be.
It's no secret that Laurel & Hardy made their best picture together in the early '30's. This movie is definitely one of their greatest and most enjoyable ones.
The first halve of the movie is mostly filled with slapstick comedy. It's most definitely the best part of the movie. The comical slapstick moments are typical and amazingly funny, mostly due to the fact how well executed and timed they are. The second halve of the movie drags on for a bit too long and doesn't rely anymore so much on its slapstick and visual humor. If only the movie would had been about 10 minutes shorter, how great than it would had been. Not saying that it isn't great or enjoyable enough now but yet the movie had more potential of becoming truly one of the greatest or most memorable Laurel & Hardy shorts.
Their mishaps with Laughing Gravy the dog are funny and provide the movie with its best moments. Also good are the comical moments with the landlord played by Laurel & Hardy regular Charlie Hall, who of course doesn't like the boys having living a dog around in his house. Still it makes me wonder why they didn't gave James Finlayson the part and why didn't Arthur Houseman played the drunk in this one? I missed the both of them in this movie and I had the feeling that the movie would had been even a more fun one with them.
A near perfect slapstick comedy, that more or less falls short of greatness in its second halve, which prevent this movie from being the best or most memorable Laurel & Hardy comedy short but nevertheless it's one of their most fun and typical comedy shorts around.
8/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
It's no secret that Laurel & Hardy made their best picture together in the early '30's. This movie is definitely one of their greatest and most enjoyable ones.
The first halve of the movie is mostly filled with slapstick comedy. It's most definitely the best part of the movie. The comical slapstick moments are typical and amazingly funny, mostly due to the fact how well executed and timed they are. The second halve of the movie drags on for a bit too long and doesn't rely anymore so much on its slapstick and visual humor. If only the movie would had been about 10 minutes shorter, how great than it would had been. Not saying that it isn't great or enjoyable enough now but yet the movie had more potential of becoming truly one of the greatest or most memorable Laurel & Hardy shorts.
Their mishaps with Laughing Gravy the dog are funny and provide the movie with its best moments. Also good are the comical moments with the landlord played by Laurel & Hardy regular Charlie Hall, who of course doesn't like the boys having living a dog around in his house. Still it makes me wonder why they didn't gave James Finlayson the part and why didn't Arthur Houseman played the drunk in this one? I missed the both of them in this movie and I had the feeling that the movie would had been even a more fun one with them.
A near perfect slapstick comedy, that more or less falls short of greatness in its second halve, which prevent this movie from being the best or most memorable Laurel & Hardy comedy short but nevertheless it's one of their most fun and typical comedy shorts around.
8/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
LAUGHING GRAVY
Aspect ratio: 1.37:1
Sound format: Mono
(Black and white - Short film)
During a heavy blizzard, boarding-house tenants Stan 'n' Ollie hide their dog from an unsympathetic landlord (Charley Hall) who threatens to evict them if they don't follow the rules. Chaos ensues...
Archetypal L&H comedy, played and filmed to perfection, as the boys' efforts to protect 'Laughing Gravy' meet with disaster at every turn. Ollie's attempts to get back into the house without being noticed by the sleeping landlord is only one of the film's many highlights, leading to a precarious rooftop episode (!) and a series of blunders and disasters. Fine comic timing, excellent set-pieces, great fun. Directed with typical gusto by L&H regular James W. Horne.
The film exists in three separate versions: It played theatrically as a two-reeler, following the elimination of a third reel in which Stan comes into an unexpected inheritance. This material has since been restored to a second version which omits the original's ending. A third edition - which appears to exist only in colorized form - contains ALL extant material, including the inheritance AND the original ending.
Aspect ratio: 1.37:1
Sound format: Mono
(Black and white - Short film)
During a heavy blizzard, boarding-house tenants Stan 'n' Ollie hide their dog from an unsympathetic landlord (Charley Hall) who threatens to evict them if they don't follow the rules. Chaos ensues...
Archetypal L&H comedy, played and filmed to perfection, as the boys' efforts to protect 'Laughing Gravy' meet with disaster at every turn. Ollie's attempts to get back into the house without being noticed by the sleeping landlord is only one of the film's many highlights, leading to a precarious rooftop episode (!) and a series of blunders and disasters. Fine comic timing, excellent set-pieces, great fun. Directed with typical gusto by L&H regular James W. Horne.
The film exists in three separate versions: It played theatrically as a two-reeler, following the elimination of a third reel in which Stan comes into an unexpected inheritance. This material has since been restored to a second version which omits the original's ending. A third edition - which appears to exist only in colorized form - contains ALL extant material, including the inheritance AND the original ending.
This is probably one of the more well-known of Laurel & Hardy's shorts. I remember when I was a kid this one was shown all the time – although without that extra reel, which wasn't re-discovered until 1985. They don't seem to show Laurel & Hardy shorts on TV anymore which is a real shame; there's a whole generation growing up knowing little about the duo.
In this one they try to conceal their little dog Laughing Gravy (possibly the only dog in cinema history to have a film named after him rather than the other way around) from their pint-size landlord, the permanently grumpy Charlie Hall. Of course, they're unsuccessful and when the landlord pitches the dog out into the snow, Ollie braves the elements to smuggle it back in. As always, the boys complicate things by attempting to haul Ollie up the side of the building using a couple of sheets tied together – with inevitable results. Although the snow is obviously fake and the location is a set, the film really does succeed in making you feel the cold as the boys slide around on the roof in their nightshirts.
There isn't that much dialogue in this film – or at least in the first twenty minutes – nearly all the humour is physical, punctuated by a number of long despairing looks into the camera from Ollie. Stan stares at the camera too on occasion, but you can tell there isn't much going on inside his character's head. He looks at the camera and you can almost hear the cogs creaking as they turn.
The laughs are pretty solid and arrive at fairly regular intervals until that final reel when things change entirely. It's not difficult to see why it was cut from the original because it just bears no relation to the rest of the film other than the fact that it is a protracted build up to a decent punch-line involving the dog.
In this one they try to conceal their little dog Laughing Gravy (possibly the only dog in cinema history to have a film named after him rather than the other way around) from their pint-size landlord, the permanently grumpy Charlie Hall. Of course, they're unsuccessful and when the landlord pitches the dog out into the snow, Ollie braves the elements to smuggle it back in. As always, the boys complicate things by attempting to haul Ollie up the side of the building using a couple of sheets tied together – with inevitable results. Although the snow is obviously fake and the location is a set, the film really does succeed in making you feel the cold as the boys slide around on the roof in their nightshirts.
There isn't that much dialogue in this film – or at least in the first twenty minutes – nearly all the humour is physical, punctuated by a number of long despairing looks into the camera from Ollie. Stan stares at the camera too on occasion, but you can tell there isn't much going on inside his character's head. He looks at the camera and you can almost hear the cogs creaking as they turn.
The laughs are pretty solid and arrive at fairly regular intervals until that final reel when things change entirely. It's not difficult to see why it was cut from the original because it just bears no relation to the rest of the film other than the fact that it is a protracted build up to a decent punch-line involving the dog.
"Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy stuck together through thick and thin; one pocketbook between them - always empty." - The opening title card of Laughing Gravy.
Laurel and Hardy's comedy short Laughing Gravy is probably the funniest thing in film that ever dealt with the ideas of hypothermia and suicide, let alone those two topics together. In a humorous and well-spent twenty minutes, we see Laurel and Hardy as roommates in a small apartment, housing their dog they nickname "Laughing Gravy" against the landlord's policies. After the dog's incessant barking wakes up the landlord, along with Laurel and Hardy breaking their bed and having the plaster on the wall crumble on top of him, the landlord (Charlie Hall) finds the dog and proceeds to throw him out the window. This leads to a series of comedic improvising by Laurel and Hardy to get the dog back as soon as they can, as well as not waking their landlord up from his slumber.
Laughing Gravy is simplicity well done, as the general bulk of Laurel and Hardy shorts are. The most evident issue here, however, is that this is an early talkie short, so you get the feeling that writer H.M. Walker, at that time, wasn't totally sure of how to structure dialog for a short/feature-film. As asinine as that sounds, after we've been graced in America with films with sound for over eight decades, it's easy to overlook that idea. However, the lack of distinguished dialog and conversation in Laughing Gravy had the ability to make me forget I was watching a short with sound half the time, as music constantly plays in the background.
Other than that, there's little else to say about Laughing Gravy other than the situational comedy in the picture works for a surprising twenty minutes, and that the ending, as unexpected as it is, finds ways to be darkly funny in a way I would've never expected an American short from the early thirties to be. The short is a simple, effective piece of early-American comedy, but not on par with the numerous other fantastic shorts of Laurel and Hardy, or the ones directed by James W. Horne.
Starring: Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Charlie Hall, and Harry Bernard. Directed by: James W. Horne.
Laurel and Hardy's comedy short Laughing Gravy is probably the funniest thing in film that ever dealt with the ideas of hypothermia and suicide, let alone those two topics together. In a humorous and well-spent twenty minutes, we see Laurel and Hardy as roommates in a small apartment, housing their dog they nickname "Laughing Gravy" against the landlord's policies. After the dog's incessant barking wakes up the landlord, along with Laurel and Hardy breaking their bed and having the plaster on the wall crumble on top of him, the landlord (Charlie Hall) finds the dog and proceeds to throw him out the window. This leads to a series of comedic improvising by Laurel and Hardy to get the dog back as soon as they can, as well as not waking their landlord up from his slumber.
Laughing Gravy is simplicity well done, as the general bulk of Laurel and Hardy shorts are. The most evident issue here, however, is that this is an early talkie short, so you get the feeling that writer H.M. Walker, at that time, wasn't totally sure of how to structure dialog for a short/feature-film. As asinine as that sounds, after we've been graced in America with films with sound for over eight decades, it's easy to overlook that idea. However, the lack of distinguished dialog and conversation in Laughing Gravy had the ability to make me forget I was watching a short with sound half the time, as music constantly plays in the background.
Other than that, there's little else to say about Laughing Gravy other than the situational comedy in the picture works for a surprising twenty minutes, and that the ending, as unexpected as it is, finds ways to be darkly funny in a way I would've never expected an American short from the early thirties to be. The short is a simple, effective piece of early-American comedy, but not on par with the numerous other fantastic shorts of Laurel and Hardy, or the ones directed by James W. Horne.
Starring: Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Charlie Hall, and Harry Bernard. Directed by: James W. Horne.
The boys rent an apartment from Charley Hall, who always seems to be angry. They take in a dog and call him Laughing Gravy. Of course, there is a "no dogs allowed" policy in the place and this puts the crabby landlord to the test. Stan and Ollie try so hard to keep the dog without disturbing the landlord (actually without letting on that the dog is there). This leads to incredible physical demands on the two guys, who even end up on the roof at one time. It's touching to see how much they care, but they are not very wise in their choices of action. This is another one of those episodes which are shown over and over. I guess there are lots of dog lovers.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesCharlie Hall plays the dog-hating landlord. In real life, he would later adopt one of Laughing Gravy's puppies.
- PatzerWhen the boys are on the snow-covered roof, something gets Laughing Gravy's attention and he walks off the set-up out of camera range. After a brief cutaway to Charlie Hall, he's back right next to the boys.
- Crazy CreditsOpening credits prologue: Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy stuck together through thick and thin -
One pocketbook between them - Always empty -
- Alternative VersionenSpanish and French language versions of this film were also produced simultaneously. Laurel and Hardy read from cue cards with their lines written phonetically in the appropriate languages. At the time of early talkies, the process of dubbing was not yet perfected.
- VerbindungenAlternate-language version of Be Big! (1931)
- SoundtracksYou'll Be Sorry Just Too Late
(1907) (uncredited)
Written by Billy Gaston
Sung a cappella by Oliver Hardy in the three-reel version
Top-Auswahl
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