An Ache in Every Stake
- 1941
- Tous publics
- 18min
NOTE IMDb
8,1/10
709
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe three stooges employed as icemen attempt to deliver ice to a mountaintop house and are forced to cater for a birthday dinner there.The three stooges employed as icemen attempt to deliver ice to a mountaintop house and are forced to cater for a birthday dinner there.The three stooges employed as icemen attempt to deliver ice to a mountaintop house and are forced to cater for a birthday dinner there.
Moe Howard
- Moe
- (as Moe)
Larry Fine
- Larry
- (as Larry)
Curly Howard
- Curly
- (as Curly)
Wilson Benge
- Butler
- (non crédité)
Symona Boniface
- Party Guest
- (non crédité)
Gino Corrado
- The Cook
- (non crédité)
Vernon Dent
- Poindexter Lawrence
- (non crédité)
Bess Flowers
- Mrs. Lawrence
- (non crédité)
Bud Jamison
- The Baker
- (non crédité)
Carl M. Leviness
- Party Guest
- (non crédité)
Blanche Payson
- The Maid
- (non crédité)
Larry Steers
- Party Guest
- (non crédité)
Victor Travis
- Ice Customer
- (non crédité)
Dorothy Vernon
- Ice Customer
- (non crédité)
Bert Young
- Taxi Driver
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
This comment should put to rest the controversy of the "Ache in Every Stake" steps and the "Music Box" steps. The hilly area of Silver Lake, where both films were made contains a group of these staircases all around town. All of them are publicly owned, although there are private homes that can only be accessed by the stairs. The "Ache in Every Stake" steps are located between 2257 and 2258 Fair Oak View Terrace. About a mile away on the other side of the hill are the "Music Box" stairs. They are located between 923 and 937 Vendome Street. Both houses in both films are not at the top of each respective staircase. They are both studio sets. In addition, both films have different plots. The Stooge film moves faster, while the L&H is more surreal.
Larry, Curly, and Moe are chuckleheads delivering ice and coal. They have difficulty carrying ice up a steep hill. They get into a fight with a chef and end up taking his place in preparing for a high class birthday party.
The change from delivering ice to cooking is rather random. This is basically two different stories. They should split this into two shorts. The first half has the fun carrying ice up that staircase. It could have extended it and made it into something special. The second half's best bit is probably Curly dancing with the spring. That's been done before. The second half is a Stooges standard story.
The change from delivering ice to cooking is rather random. This is basically two different stories. They should split this into two shorts. The first half has the fun carrying ice up that staircase. It could have extended it and made it into something special. The second half's best bit is probably Curly dancing with the spring. That's been done before. The second half is a Stooges standard story.
There are some classic sight gags in this Three Stooges flick, one of better ones the boys did, even though some of jokes were familiar, like the cooking scenes. Nonetheless, who can forget that long line of stairs up to the house where Curly and his mates try to bring a woman a big block of ice? The ice truck scenes, complete with big blocks and tongs to carry them, are really a look at ancient history, as that was the way people obtained ice for their homes.
Vernon Dent is the main "victim" in this Three Stooges a short. He's a poor guy whose just trying to celebrate his birthday but every time he tries to bring home the birthday cake for himself and party guests, the Stooges give him a face full of it.
The boys wind up catering his party - don't ask how - and we get more memorable scenes, such as Curly's having a sofa spring stuck to the seat of his pants.....and what happens every time he tries to dance, or Curly pretending he's a barber shaving a block of ice - and talking to it! It was funny material decades ago, and it's still funny.
Moe and Larry also contribute in their customary entertaining fashion, but this really highlight's Curly in his prime.
Vernon Dent is the main "victim" in this Three Stooges a short. He's a poor guy whose just trying to celebrate his birthday but every time he tries to bring home the birthday cake for himself and party guests, the Stooges give him a face full of it.
The boys wind up catering his party - don't ask how - and we get more memorable scenes, such as Curly's having a sofa spring stuck to the seat of his pants.....and what happens every time he tries to dance, or Curly pretending he's a barber shaving a block of ice - and talking to it! It was funny material decades ago, and it's still funny.
Moe and Larry also contribute in their customary entertaining fashion, but this really highlight's Curly in his prime.
An Ache in Every Stake (1941)
*** (out of 4)
Nice short has The Three Stooges working as ice delivery men but they can't seem to get a block up a large flight of stairs so they must come up with a new plan. After finally reaches the top of the steps they end up filling in for a cook at a birthday part and sure enough everything goes wrong. This isn't a classic from the trio but I think there are enough laughs to make it worth viewing. As with many of their shorts, this one here isn't the most original thing out there as many elements were borrowed from Laurel and Hardy's THE MUSIC BOX but these elements are mainly kept to the first half. The impact isn't nearly as good as that film but I think we get some pretty good violence early on and especially the scenes with Curly's head stuck in a block of ice and Moe and Larry have to get it out. The cooking scenes aren't all that original either but the three really sell it and get some nice laughs.
*** (out of 4)
Nice short has The Three Stooges working as ice delivery men but they can't seem to get a block up a large flight of stairs so they must come up with a new plan. After finally reaches the top of the steps they end up filling in for a cook at a birthday part and sure enough everything goes wrong. This isn't a classic from the trio but I think there are enough laughs to make it worth viewing. As with many of their shorts, this one here isn't the most original thing out there as many elements were borrowed from Laurel and Hardy's THE MUSIC BOX but these elements are mainly kept to the first half. The impact isn't nearly as good as that film but I think we get some pretty good violence early on and especially the scenes with Curly's head stuck in a block of ice and Moe and Larry have to get it out. The cooking scenes aren't all that original either but the three really sell it and get some nice laughs.
Just to correct one thing that was mentioned in a couple of the other reviews here. In this one, Vernon Dent is not a judge. He's merely a guy trying to get home with his birthday cake in one piece. The one where he's a judge is the remake made with Shemp where, as usual, Columbia spliced two stories in order to get one, "An Ache In Every Steak" with "A Plumbing We Will Go". With that said and done...this is without any doubt one of their very best comedies ever. It's right up there with "Men In Black" from 1934. The one thing I never hear though from other admirers of the boys is how their shorts never really seem dated or old fashioned. As much as I enjoy Abbott & Costello, they seem stuck in the 1940's and WWII. The Stooges are timeless because they hit the nerve in all of us and I've seen people who don't even understand English or some of the contemporary references laugh unceasingly at their antics. If that's not a testimonial to greatness, I don't know what is. Just watch this one and don't be drinking anything while doing so or it might come out your nose.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesContrary to common belief, the long staircase in this film is NOT the same one used in Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy's Oscar-winning short, Livreurs, sachez livrer! (1932). However, it is in the same Silver Lake district of Los Angeles, about two miles away.
- GaffesThe ice truck is parked at the bottom of the staircase, but when the taxi drops Mr. Lawrence off, the truck is nowhere to be seen.
- ConnexionsEdited into The Three Stooges: Volume III (1982)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- All This and Bedlam Too
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 18min
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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