CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAt a rail crossing, a small fender-bender incident turns into a major tit-for-tat retaliatory war among various motorists.At a rail crossing, a small fender-bender incident turns into a major tit-for-tat retaliatory war among various motorists.At a rail crossing, a small fender-bender incident turns into a major tit-for-tat retaliatory war among various motorists.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Opiniones destacadas
Laurel & Hardy are once again sailors in this silent short from the early days of their partnership. The relationship between them is pretty much fully-formed by now, and the tit-for-tat format of their rucks with those who displease them (or whom, more often, they displease) is already established. On shore leave, they rent a car and go off in search of girls. They find a likely pair attempting to retrieve sweets from a sidewalk dispenser, and despite inevitably scattering the sweets all over the street, the boys somehow manage to entice the ladies into their car.
It's not long before they find themselves at loggerheads with other drivers as they find themselves stuck in a traffic jam, and soon cars are being systematically destroyed as tempers fray. The film is pretty good and there's quite a few laughs scattered throughout.
It's not long before they find themselves at loggerheads with other drivers as they find themselves stuck in a traffic jam, and soon cars are being systematically destroyed as tempers fray. The film is pretty good and there's quite a few laughs scattered throughout.
This is one of the best Laurel and Hardy shorts made, even though it is a silent one. Big Business came out a year later and has the same premise. It has been argued that BB is the funnier of the two. I think Two Tars is funnier because it is much more relevant today as it deals with frustrations found in a traffic jam.
What makes these Laurel and Hardy silents a bit funnier to me then when they were first released is, since I know what their voices sound like, I can imagine them saying the lines when I read the title cards. Their voices matched them perfectly.
It's a shame here in the United States that there are not box sets of their shorts on DVD.
What makes these Laurel and Hardy silents a bit funnier to me then when they were first released is, since I know what their voices sound like, I can imagine them saying the lines when I read the title cards. Their voices matched them perfectly.
It's a shame here in the United States that there are not box sets of their shorts on DVD.
This is a good short feature, among the best of Laurel & Hardy's silent movies and one of several of their popular 'retribution comedies'. Stan and Ollie are "Two Tars" on leave, who pick up a couple of women and then get involved in a series of slapstick confrontations. The second reel, set in a traffic jam, is particularly funny. Two of their best supporting players appear in Charlie Hall and Edgar Kennedy. If you like Laurel & Hardy's silent films, make sure to see this one.
Part of the beauty of this perfectly paced classic comedy is not just it's gradual compounding of incident but how resonant it's plotting is today. Who likes traffic jams? Nobody! Stan and Ollie seem almost prescient to have tapped into a vexation that plagues us even now; maybe more than ever on today's superhighways that still cannot accommodate the flow of modern commuting. It is not so much the individual performances that matter here, but the over-all building of pace and piling on of incident. I think of this film every time I'm tangled in bad traffic; so will you, but please resist the temptation to rip the fender off of the car alongside you -- it may be mine.
9tavm
When I first watched this at the East Baton Rouge Parish Library about 30 years ago, I remember being a bit disappointed since there was no dialogue or sound effects, this being my first exposure to a silent film in its entirety not to mention that of Laurel & Hardy without their voices. I liked it much better when I bought the VHS tape during the '90s and having now rewatched it on Hulu as linked from IMDb, I now think this is one of their near-best ever! Everything from Stan's first accident when driving to Ollie's when he takes the wheel to a bubble gum machine incident involving L & H regular Charlie Hall to that chaotic traffic jam, it's just one hilarious visual gag after another! Besides Hall, other funny supporting turns come from Thomas Benton Roberts, a prop man at Hal Roach Studios, as a man with the tomatoes, Edgar Dearing as the motorcycle cop attempting to arrest the boys, and especially Ruby Blaine as the blonde half of the girls Stan and Ollie pick up for dates who really gives it to Hall and later sprays oil on another female passerby. Ms. Blaine was reportedly a professional wrestler then appearing in near Pasadena. Thelma Hill plays the other brunette half. If you're interested in the behind-the-scenes info on this particular short, I highly recommend Randy Skretvedt's book "Laurel and Hardy: The Magic Behind the Movies" on which he reviews all their films (though since one of them-Hats Off-is completely lost for now, he can only mention what reviews at the time said of that). So on that note, Two Tars is highly recommended.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaNo scripts seem to have survived, but stills indicate that a couple of scenes were filmed and then cut, including one in which Stan gives Ollie a shoeshine before they go out on their day of mayhem. One of the crew regulars recalled that at the end of the traffic jam, Stan wanted to show a truck carrying a pole which goes into the window of a limousine and tears the body from the chassis. This shot isn't in the film, but the end result is the chauffeur walking on the road as he 'drives' the chassis. The traffic jam sequence took 4 days to film on a road that now borders the Santa Monica Airport.
- ErroresA motorist puts a knife into one of the tyres on the Boys' car, yet later they drive of without changing it.
- Citas
Brunette Girl: Are you gonna let that bozo bump our car?
- ConexionesEdited into The Golden Age of Comedy (1957)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Two Tough Tars
- Locaciones de filmación
- Main Street, Culver City, California, Estados Unidos(opening scenes)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 21min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1
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