Condamnés à quitter la ville par un juge très sévère pour vagabondage, Stan et Oliver rencontrent un sympathique ivrogne qui les invite à dormir dans son luxueux manoir. Mais l'ivrogne s'est... Tout lireCondamnés à quitter la ville par un juge très sévère pour vagabondage, Stan et Oliver rencontrent un sympathique ivrogne qui les invite à dormir dans son luxueux manoir. Mais l'ivrogne s'est trompé d'adresse.Condamnés à quitter la ville par un juge très sévère pour vagabondage, Stan et Oliver rencontrent un sympathique ivrogne qui les invite à dormir dans son luxueux manoir. Mais l'ivrogne s'est trompé d'adresse.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Drunk
- (as Arthur Houseman)
- Mrs. Beaumont
- (as Vivian Oakland)
- Hawkins - the Butler
- (non crédité)
- Court Recorder
- (non crédité)
- Defendant
- (non crédité)
- Policeman
- (non crédité)
- Patrolman
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
*** 1/2 (out of 4)
Since the jail is too full a judge orders Laurel and Hardy to get out of town within a hour. Outside the courthouse they help a drunk man who then offers to let them spend the night with him but the drunk takes them to the wrong house. Plenty a gags from start to finish in this very good short. The highlights include trying to get a key from a drain and the terrific ending where L&H get drunk with another man's wife.
Saps at Sea (1940)
*** 1/2 (out of 4)
Terrific Laurel and Hardy feature has Hardy suffering a nervous breakdown so Laurel suggests they go to the sea for peace of quiet. This doesn't work as planned but things get worse when an escaped killer kidnaps them. Clocking in at just around 57-minutes this here basically plays out as two shorts with the first half taking place at home and the second half at sea. The first half is a lot funnier but the ending is among the funniest stuff I've seen from any L&H film.
As usual Stan and Oliver are homeless and workless. Here they are forced out of a town but think they've landed on their feet when a drunk takes them into his luxury home. This plot gives the leads only really one type of humour to concentrate on physical routines. That isn't a major problem as they are pretty funny is never exactly setting the world on fire.
However I always liked their dialogue together as it is often hilarious and well written to make them both look foolish. Here there is none of this worth speaking of. Both the leads do well and there's no doubting their abilities when it comes to falling over in amusing way.
Overall this is funny if you like L&H's physical stuff which I do, but I did feel like the job was only half done when their was none of their usual banter.
An angry judge orders vagrants Stan & Ollie to `SCRAM!' or they'll be locked-up. Before they can obey, a good deed performed for an inebriated millionaire precipitates the Boys into a crazy series of misunderstandings.
A hilarious little film. Highlight: the wild romp with the lady of the house. That's Richard Cramer as His Honor; Arthur Housman as the drunk; and Vivien Oakland portrays the lady.
Aspect ratio: 1.37:1
Sound format: Mono
(Black and white - Short film)
Ordered out of town by an aggressive judge (Richard Cramer), two vagrants (Laurel and Hardy) become involved with a drunken motorist (Arthur Housman) who invites them home. Unfortunately, he takes them to the wrong house...
Brilliantly constructed short film, directed by Raymond McCarey and scripted by H.M. Walker, in which L&H fall foul of the same judge on two separate occasions, with hilarious (and painful) consequences. Cast alongside some of the best comic actors of the day (Housman is note-perfect in his signature role, while Cramer plays it straight as the no-nonsense judge), L&H ply their trade with consummate skill, and the scene in which co-star Vivien Oakland gets blind drunk and sets off a chain reaction of uproarious laughter is a joy. Wonderful stuff, a highlight of L&H's distinguished career.
Scram! opens with Laurel and Hardy being ordered out of town by a judge after finding them sleeping on a park bench. In the process of leaving town, they run into a congenial drunk (Arthur Housman, who plays a wildly convincing drunk) who invites them back to his home to spend the night after they retrieved his key when it fell into a sewer. Despite being incoherent, the man manages to drive the two of them to the home of Mrs. Beaumont (Vivien Oakland), mistaking it for his own home. While the drunk mindlessly stands outside searching for the key to his home, Laurel and Hardy barge in through the window, being greeted with Mrs. Beaumont and proceeding to get drunk themselves when they inform her they know her husband, who happens to really be someone Laurel and Hardy have already found themselves acquainted with.
Scram! is all too familiar for a dedicated Laurel and Hardy fan, especially one who has seen their admittedly short range of physical comedy. All the aforementioned tropes make an appearance here or there, and their geniality could easily be mistaken for genuine humor. The moral of this particular short is just because you recognize the sight-gag or the ploy doesn't mean it's necessarily funny. If anything, the funniest part of the film is how much it got away with in 1932: drunk driving, breaking and entering, philandering, and two men in the same bed with one woman. Did the Motion Picture Association of America fall asleep when looking over the contents of the film making sure it was in line with the Hays Code?
Starring: Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Arthur Housman, Vivien Oakland, and Richard Cramer. Directed by: Ray McCarey.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBanned in the Netherlands upon its release in 1932 due to the scene when Stan and Ollie lie on a bed with a woman. This ban was subsequently lifted.
- GaffesLaurel is seen smoking a cigar before he lights it.
- Citations
Judge: You're charged with vagrancy. Are you guilty or not guilty?
Oliver: Not guilty, Your Highness.
Judge: On what grounds?
Stanley Laurel: We weren't on the grounds - we were sleeping on a park bench.
- Versions alternativesThere is also a colorized version.
- ConnexionsEdited into Dance of the Cookoos (1982)
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Scram!
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 20min
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1