ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,7/10
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MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn the dead of night, a terrible toothache wakes up poor Stan, and after a series of home-made remedies, Ollie takes him to the dentist. There, ample amounts of laughing gas lead to the perf... Tout lireIn the dead of night, a terrible toothache wakes up poor Stan, and after a series of home-made remedies, Ollie takes him to the dentist. There, ample amounts of laughing gas lead to the perfect mess. Will Stan ever visit the dentist again?In the dead of night, a terrible toothache wakes up poor Stan, and after a series of home-made remedies, Ollie takes him to the dentist. There, ample amounts of laughing gas lead to the perfect mess. Will Stan ever visit the dentist again?
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
Dorothy Coburn
- Dentist's Nurse
- (uncredited)
Edgar Dearing
- Dental Patient
- (uncredited)
Otto Fries
- Burly Dentist
- (uncredited)
Al Hallett
- Dental Patient
- (uncredited)
Jack Hill
- Irate Motorist
- (uncredited)
Jack Lloyd
- Dentist
- (uncredited)
Sam Lufkin
- Dental Patient
- (uncredited)
Viola Richard
- Dentist's Nurse
- (uncredited)
Tiny Sandford
- Dental Patient
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
For the lovers of Laurel and Hardy out there, this is about as typical as you can find--with lots of bits in this silent film that were reprised in later Stan and Ollie shorts. While some may find this a bit repetitive, there is a nice familiarity about the film--plus in most cases, this was their first film to feature these bits.
The film begins with Stan in misery with a toothache and their irritated landlord losing his patience. Once again, as in THEY GO BOOM, Charlie Hall is the short-tempered landlord and once again the argument results in some funny rough and tumble bits. Then the film switches to the dentist's office and is reminiscent of the dentist portion of PARDON US--but with a twist. Both Stan and Ollie get a massive over-dose of laughing gas and leave the office highly intoxicated. This leads to a funny but overly long segment with traffic cop Edgar Kennedy. It seems to go on forever but end very well.
Again, nothing especially different about this film compared to others, but it is all done so well and is so much fun, I really didn't mind at all. This is one of the more difficult silent shorts of the team to find, but if you do, be sure to give it a watch.
The film begins with Stan in misery with a toothache and their irritated landlord losing his patience. Once again, as in THEY GO BOOM, Charlie Hall is the short-tempered landlord and once again the argument results in some funny rough and tumble bits. Then the film switches to the dentist's office and is reminiscent of the dentist portion of PARDON US--but with a twist. Both Stan and Ollie get a massive over-dose of laughing gas and leave the office highly intoxicated. This leads to a funny but overly long segment with traffic cop Edgar Kennedy. It seems to go on forever but end very well.
Again, nothing especially different about this film compared to others, but it is all done so well and is so much fun, I really didn't mind at all. This is one of the more difficult silent shorts of the team to find, but if you do, be sure to give it a watch.
Laurel and Hardy go full anarchic in "Leave 'Em Laughing", as Stan's toothache prompts a visit to the dentist, where things run completely amok. Stan and Ollie were probably still trying to figure out their comedy style at this time, but the short is still a riot. It's the sort of thing that lots of people would probably love to try, especially once the guys get on the road.
I noticed that one of the signs said Culver City. That's where "Jeopardy!" gets filmed nowadays. It was also where Disney's "Fantasia" got animated. I bet that L&H never envisioned either of those when they filmed this.
Anyway, funny short.
PS: Edgar Kennedy, who plays the cop, also played the lemonade vendor in the Marx Brothers' "Duck Soup".
I noticed that one of the signs said Culver City. That's where "Jeopardy!" gets filmed nowadays. It was also where Disney's "Fantasia" got animated. I bet that L&H never envisioned either of those when they filmed this.
Anyway, funny short.
PS: Edgar Kennedy, who plays the cop, also played the lemonade vendor in the Marx Brothers' "Duck Soup".
In 2023 Flicker Alley released LAUREL & HARDY - YEAR ONE which included all the silent shorts that L & H made in 1927. Most of these shorts did not feature them as a team. But by the following year they were inseparable and the comedies they made together included one gem after another. Most people don't know that L & H began their careers during the silent era. When sound arrived, they were fortunate their voices matched their physical appearances and personalities perfectly so the transition actually helped to boost their popularity. However, this success placed their silent shorts into obscurity and they were essentially forgotten.
In 1993 the descendants of Hal Roach, the man who produced the Laurel & Hardy comedies, issued a 10 volume set on VHS of all the L&H silent shorts along with a few of their solo efforts. Six years later Image Entertainment reissued that VHS set on 10 DVDs. The shorts were in rough shape but at least they were in complete form. Aside from the many really bad public domain copies that still are out there in varying degrees of substandard quality, that's all we had available up to now. But in 2024, Flicker Alley is back with LAUREL & HARDY: YEAR TWO, which contains all the 10 shorts L & H made in 1928.
Now that L & H were being billed and promoted as a team, they no longer appeared as supporting players in the shorts of other Hal Roach comedians although they would appear as themselves in cameos from time to time. The first of the 10 shorts, LEAVE EM" LAUGHING, about the effects of laughing gas after a trip to the dentist was an instant classic and set the pattern for the other 9. The basic premise being that despite their best intentions or occasionally from deliberate acts by the boys (as they were affectionately known), the result was usually mayhem and destruction on an unprecedented scale.
The other 9 shorts are as follows. THE FINISHING TOUCH which shows how not to build a house. FROM SOUP TO NUTS where the boys destroy a swanky dinner party. YOU'RE DARN TOOTIN' has two horn players giving busking a bad name. THEIR PURPLE MOMENT introduces L & H's wives for the first time. SHOULD MARRIED MEN GO HOME? Focuses on more domestic "bliss". EARLY TO BED has Stan playing butler to Ollie's rich man. TWO TARS is a classic of reciprocal destruction while HABEAS CORPUS features the boys in a graveyard. Finally WE FAW DOWN has L & H clashing with their wives over a poker game.
As with the first set, LAUREL & HARDY: YEAR TWO comes loaded with extras. There are commentaries, special features, comedy fragments, and a fully restored version of A PAIR OF TIGHTS a female "Laurel & Hardy" comedy starring Anita Garvin & Marion Byron which has not been seen since it was excerpted for THE GOLDEN AGE OF COMEDY compilation in 1960. The accompanying scores by Neil Brand, Robert Israel, and others are fine as usual but it's really great to have the original Vitaphone music and sound effects tracks for the later shorts. Another fine job from Flicker Alley. I anxiously await 1929...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
In 1993 the descendants of Hal Roach, the man who produced the Laurel & Hardy comedies, issued a 10 volume set on VHS of all the L&H silent shorts along with a few of their solo efforts. Six years later Image Entertainment reissued that VHS set on 10 DVDs. The shorts were in rough shape but at least they were in complete form. Aside from the many really bad public domain copies that still are out there in varying degrees of substandard quality, that's all we had available up to now. But in 2024, Flicker Alley is back with LAUREL & HARDY: YEAR TWO, which contains all the 10 shorts L & H made in 1928.
Now that L & H were being billed and promoted as a team, they no longer appeared as supporting players in the shorts of other Hal Roach comedians although they would appear as themselves in cameos from time to time. The first of the 10 shorts, LEAVE EM" LAUGHING, about the effects of laughing gas after a trip to the dentist was an instant classic and set the pattern for the other 9. The basic premise being that despite their best intentions or occasionally from deliberate acts by the boys (as they were affectionately known), the result was usually mayhem and destruction on an unprecedented scale.
The other 9 shorts are as follows. THE FINISHING TOUCH which shows how not to build a house. FROM SOUP TO NUTS where the boys destroy a swanky dinner party. YOU'RE DARN TOOTIN' has two horn players giving busking a bad name. THEIR PURPLE MOMENT introduces L & H's wives for the first time. SHOULD MARRIED MEN GO HOME? Focuses on more domestic "bliss". EARLY TO BED has Stan playing butler to Ollie's rich man. TWO TARS is a classic of reciprocal destruction while HABEAS CORPUS features the boys in a graveyard. Finally WE FAW DOWN has L & H clashing with their wives over a poker game.
As with the first set, LAUREL & HARDY: YEAR TWO comes loaded with extras. There are commentaries, special features, comedy fragments, and a fully restored version of A PAIR OF TIGHTS a female "Laurel & Hardy" comedy starring Anita Garvin & Marion Byron which has not been seen since it was excerpted for THE GOLDEN AGE OF COMEDY compilation in 1960. The accompanying scores by Neil Brand, Robert Israel, and others are fine as usual but it's really great to have the original Vitaphone music and sound effects tracks for the later shorts. Another fine job from Flicker Alley. I anxiously await 1929...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were comedic geniuses, individually and together, and their partnership was deservedly iconic and one of the best there was. They left behind a large body of work, a vast majority of it being entertaining to classic comedy, at their best they were hilarious and their best efforts were great examples of how to do comedy without being juvenile or distasteful.
While not classic Laurel and Hardy, later films, short and feature, had stronger chemistry when fully formed and used their considerable talents better, 'Leave Em Laughing' is a lot of fun. Before, Laurel was much funnier and more interesting while Hardy in most of the previous outings had too little to do. 'Leave Em Laughing' is one of their first very good efforts, to me it's easily one of their best at this point of their careers and one of the first to feel like a Laurel and Hardy short rather than a short featuring them.
'Leave Em Laughing' does take a little too long to get going, coming to life when at the dentist.
Also found that the ending went on longer than it should have done.
Laurel however is very funny, and sometimes hilarious. It is wonderful seeing Hardy having more to do and he is on Laurel's level and actually even funnier. The chemistry is certainly much more here than in previous outings of theirs, namely because there's more of them together and it was starting to feel like a partnership. Support is nice.
A good deal of the humour, particularly when at the dentist and the effects of the laughing gas, is well timed, hugely energetic and very funny (hilarious at its best), with everything going at a lively pace and there is a lot of charm and good nature to keep one going. 'Leave Em Laughing' looks quite good still.
In summary, a lot of fun. 8/10 Bethany Cox
While not classic Laurel and Hardy, later films, short and feature, had stronger chemistry when fully formed and used their considerable talents better, 'Leave Em Laughing' is a lot of fun. Before, Laurel was much funnier and more interesting while Hardy in most of the previous outings had too little to do. 'Leave Em Laughing' is one of their first very good efforts, to me it's easily one of their best at this point of their careers and one of the first to feel like a Laurel and Hardy short rather than a short featuring them.
'Leave Em Laughing' does take a little too long to get going, coming to life when at the dentist.
Also found that the ending went on longer than it should have done.
Laurel however is very funny, and sometimes hilarious. It is wonderful seeing Hardy having more to do and he is on Laurel's level and actually even funnier. The chemistry is certainly much more here than in previous outings of theirs, namely because there's more of them together and it was starting to feel like a partnership. Support is nice.
A good deal of the humour, particularly when at the dentist and the effects of the laughing gas, is well timed, hugely energetic and very funny (hilarious at its best), with everything going at a lively pace and there is a lot of charm and good nature to keep one going. 'Leave Em Laughing' looks quite good still.
In summary, a lot of fun. 8/10 Bethany Cox
This movie certainly does justice to its title.
It takes a while for the movie to take shape and pace, after all, this is one of the earliest Laurel & Hardy movies, from the period when they obviously were still searching for the right style. However after the movie its slow ending the movie really starts to take pace and become interesting from the moment the two boys are at the dentist. The movie becomes a good old fashioned laugh fest from that point on.
The bits at the dentist were already great but the movie gets even better in the ending, when the boys are extremely high from the laughing gas they got exposed to at the dentist. They get into trouble with the police officer played by Edgar Kennedy, who tries to control the traffic but of course the seriously high boys keep messing things and traffic up with their car.
The movie consists out of some great slapstick moments and some hilarious comical situations. Also the very last scene is one to remember, also because of the fact that it's so totally random. It makes it all the more hilarious.
All in all this is a surprisingly good and entertaining Laurel & Hardy silent comedy short, especially when considering that this movie was from their begin-period.
8/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
It takes a while for the movie to take shape and pace, after all, this is one of the earliest Laurel & Hardy movies, from the period when they obviously were still searching for the right style. However after the movie its slow ending the movie really starts to take pace and become interesting from the moment the two boys are at the dentist. The movie becomes a good old fashioned laugh fest from that point on.
The bits at the dentist were already great but the movie gets even better in the ending, when the boys are extremely high from the laughing gas they got exposed to at the dentist. They get into trouble with the police officer played by Edgar Kennedy, who tries to control the traffic but of course the seriously high boys keep messing things and traffic up with their car.
The movie consists out of some great slapstick moments and some hilarious comical situations. Also the very last scene is one to remember, also because of the fact that it's so totally random. It makes it all the more hilarious.
All in all this is a surprisingly good and entertaining Laurel & Hardy silent comedy short, especially when considering that this movie was from their begin-period.
8/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFirst appearance by Edgar Kennedy in a Laurel and Hardy film. Kennedy would go on to play exasperated cops in several more films with the duo.
- GaffesStan an Ollie are in bed with Stan suffering from toothache. Ollie fills a hot water bottle and places it on the pillow for Stan to put his head on it. The stopper comes out of the bottle and soaks the bed which wakes Ollie up. He picks up the limp bottle and throws it on the floor. A while later he gets out of bed and steps on the bottle and water shoots up his leg.
- ConnexionsEdited into Laurel and Hardy's Laughing 20's (1965)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Bırakın Gülsünler
- Lieux de tournage
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée22 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was Leave 'em Laughing (1928) officially released in Canada in English?
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