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This is a first rate Laurel & Hardy comedy, a near perfect example of what they do best. I've long considered it one of their most enjoyable silent films and, for that matter, one of the best short comedies they ever made. The story follows a basic three-act structure, solidly constructed yet loose enough to allow for plenty of gags along the way. It builds steadily from the opening sequence to the wild climax, all beautifully photographed. (Ahhh, the sunny streets of Culver City!) You're Darn Tootin' is one of only two L&H comedies directed by their frequent co-star Edgar Kennedy (the other is From Soup to Nuts), and based on the results in both cases it's too bad Kennedy didn't direct Laurel & Hardy more often, as he demonstrated a real flair for their brand of comedy. The boys themselves -- who still look pretty boyish at this early stage of their career -- responded well to his direction, likely because they'd worked harmoniously as fellow performers.
Here Stan and Ollie play a pair of hapless musicians whose professional status declines sharply in the course of one disastrous day. We begin with a band concert in a public park that starts placidly but turns rowdy; we proceed to a quieter albeit amusing mid-section at the boys' boarding house, where they're behind on paying their rent; and we conclude with a grand finale of contagious shin-kicking, pants- ripping, and other harrowing acts of civic chaos, all topped with a memorable sight gag as the pay-off. The opening scene at the park is so methodically timed and builds so rhythmically you can practically hear the music, even when watching a mute print. (In the 1960s the sequence was given a nicely synchronized musical track by Robert Youngson for his compilation The Further Perils of Laurel & Hardy.) For me, the best moments often can be found in the smaller gestures rather than in the vistas of full-scale mayhem. Watch the guys' faces during the medium two-shot at the boarding house dinner table, all filmed in a single take, when Stan takes the tops off the salt and pepper shakers, uses each condiment on his soup, and then fails to replace the tops properly. Ollie falls victim to this maneuver not once but twice, first dumping too much salt into his soup and then too much pepper. We know what's coming, but somehow our anticipation of this little disaster translates into amusement. And they make it look so natural! We're amazed when Buster Keaton blithely crashes a bicycle and sails over the handlebars, but with Laurel & Hardy it's the nuances that score the biggest laughs. Nuances, such as the play of Ollie's fingers as he delicately breaks the crackers into his soup, soup that we know is about to be ruined because he's not paying attention as Stan takes the top off the pepper shaker. Ollie takes such pleasure in breaking up those crackers it borders on heart-wrenching, and he looks so crushed when his soup gets ruined, but even so, we laugh.
Everything comes to a head in the unforgettable finale, when the boys try to make a go of it as street buskers. Needless to say, they fail. And then argue, and manage to draw an alarming number of passersby into their violent quarrel. We find once again that it doesn't take much to start a major riot in Culver City. On some level I suppose I enjoy these "total warfare" sequences because they use slapstick to cheerfully confirm our worst suspicion about humanity: i.e. that just under the veneer of civilized behavior, whether disguised in the natty suits and snap-brim hats of the 1920s or the clothes of today, we're quite ready to drop all pretense of civility and clobber each other for the most stupid reasons imaginable, or for no reason at all. That's what I love about the comedy of Laurel & Hardy: their films represent society as we know it, exaggerated only slightly. Which, when you think about it, is kind of appalling.
Here Stan and Ollie play a pair of hapless musicians whose professional status declines sharply in the course of one disastrous day. We begin with a band concert in a public park that starts placidly but turns rowdy; we proceed to a quieter albeit amusing mid-section at the boys' boarding house, where they're behind on paying their rent; and we conclude with a grand finale of contagious shin-kicking, pants- ripping, and other harrowing acts of civic chaos, all topped with a memorable sight gag as the pay-off. The opening scene at the park is so methodically timed and builds so rhythmically you can practically hear the music, even when watching a mute print. (In the 1960s the sequence was given a nicely synchronized musical track by Robert Youngson for his compilation The Further Perils of Laurel & Hardy.) For me, the best moments often can be found in the smaller gestures rather than in the vistas of full-scale mayhem. Watch the guys' faces during the medium two-shot at the boarding house dinner table, all filmed in a single take, when Stan takes the tops off the salt and pepper shakers, uses each condiment on his soup, and then fails to replace the tops properly. Ollie falls victim to this maneuver not once but twice, first dumping too much salt into his soup and then too much pepper. We know what's coming, but somehow our anticipation of this little disaster translates into amusement. And they make it look so natural! We're amazed when Buster Keaton blithely crashes a bicycle and sails over the handlebars, but with Laurel & Hardy it's the nuances that score the biggest laughs. Nuances, such as the play of Ollie's fingers as he delicately breaks the crackers into his soup, soup that we know is about to be ruined because he's not paying attention as Stan takes the top off the pepper shaker. Ollie takes such pleasure in breaking up those crackers it borders on heart-wrenching, and he looks so crushed when his soup gets ruined, but even so, we laugh.
Everything comes to a head in the unforgettable finale, when the boys try to make a go of it as street buskers. Needless to say, they fail. And then argue, and manage to draw an alarming number of passersby into their violent quarrel. We find once again that it doesn't take much to start a major riot in Culver City. On some level I suppose I enjoy these "total warfare" sequences because they use slapstick to cheerfully confirm our worst suspicion about humanity: i.e. that just under the veneer of civilized behavior, whether disguised in the natty suits and snap-brim hats of the 1920s or the clothes of today, we're quite ready to drop all pretense of civility and clobber each other for the most stupid reasons imaginable, or for no reason at all. That's what I love about the comedy of Laurel & Hardy: their films represent society as we know it, exaggerated only slightly. Which, when you think about it, is kind of appalling.
- wmorrow59
- 3 de jun. de 2004
- Link permanente
- JohnHowardReid
- 23 de abr. de 2018
- Link permanente
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, 'You're Darn Tootin' 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. 'You're Darn Tootin' is very good, to me it's easily one of their best at this point of their careers and one of the first, along with the two mentioned above, to feel like a Laurel and Hardy short rather than a short featuring them.
'You're Darn Tootin' is flimsy in story, and doesn't feel quite enough for the short's length.
A few gags are a bit repetitive and old-fashioned.
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.
Both Laurel and Hardy have great moments, especially the orchestral presentation in the park sequence which is sheer hilarity.
A good deal of the humour is well timed, hugely energetic and very funny if not always hilarious, with everything going at a lively pace and there is a lot of charm and good nature to keep one going. 'You're Darn Tootin' looks quite good still with some interesting shots.
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, 'You're Darn Tootin' 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. 'You're Darn Tootin' is very good, to me it's easily one of their best at this point of their careers and one of the first, along with the two mentioned above, to feel like a Laurel and Hardy short rather than a short featuring them.
'You're Darn Tootin' is flimsy in story, and doesn't feel quite enough for the short's length.
A few gags are a bit repetitive and old-fashioned.
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.
Both Laurel and Hardy have great moments, especially the orchestral presentation in the park sequence which is sheer hilarity.
A good deal of the humour is well timed, hugely energetic and very funny if not always hilarious, with everything going at a lively pace and there is a lot of charm and good nature to keep one going. 'You're Darn Tootin' looks quite good still with some interesting shots.
In summary, a lot of fun. 8/10 Bethany Cox
- TheLittleSongbird
- 12 de ago. de 2018
- Link permanente
This is the story of two musicians who played neither by note no ear, instead they used brute strength. On the night in question the orchestra leader was making his farewell appearance something the public had been demanding for years. Fired for messing this up the pair find themselves out of their house as well as they are already 14 weeks late with the rent. On the city streets with only their instruments the pair find it hard going earning money.
Shown as part of BBC3's generally good documentary series on silent comedy legends "Silent Clowns", this Laurel and Hardy short is one of the very few silent films of theirs I have seen. I do love their "talky" short films and looked forward to this. It took a minute or two to get used to the lack of audible jokes and the short does demonstrate that this was something they wanted, because the title cards are mostly funny and not solely used to describe plot. Naturally though the vast majority of this is physical comedy, which for fans will be just fine because they still deliver this really well.
It is impressive how the pair do so much with very basic routines and obvious gags. The opening orchestra scene is funny and, after a bridge scene, the streets produce some good laughs leading up to the famous sidewalk chaos bit. Newcomers might not see what the fuss is about (this is always the risk some viewers just watch L&H and think "all been done before", missing the point that no, it has all been done since) but fans will take to it despite the lack of sound. As always Laurel and Hardy work really well together, trading laughs off one another and delivering their parts equally well. Kennedy's directorial approach is wisely to pretty much just point and shoot.
Overall an enjoyable and funny silent short that Laurel and Hardy fans will lap up even if, like me, those accustom to sound will feel its absence.
Shown as part of BBC3's generally good documentary series on silent comedy legends "Silent Clowns", this Laurel and Hardy short is one of the very few silent films of theirs I have seen. I do love their "talky" short films and looked forward to this. It took a minute or two to get used to the lack of audible jokes and the short does demonstrate that this was something they wanted, because the title cards are mostly funny and not solely used to describe plot. Naturally though the vast majority of this is physical comedy, which for fans will be just fine because they still deliver this really well.
It is impressive how the pair do so much with very basic routines and obvious gags. The opening orchestra scene is funny and, after a bridge scene, the streets produce some good laughs leading up to the famous sidewalk chaos bit. Newcomers might not see what the fuss is about (this is always the risk some viewers just watch L&H and think "all been done before", missing the point that no, it has all been done since) but fans will take to it despite the lack of sound. As always Laurel and Hardy work really well together, trading laughs off one another and delivering their parts equally well. Kennedy's directorial approach is wisely to pretty much just point and shoot.
Overall an enjoyable and funny silent short that Laurel and Hardy fans will lap up even if, like me, those accustom to sound will feel its absence.
- bob the moo
- 13 de jun. de 2006
- Link permanente
- weezeralfalfa
- 11 de out. de 2018
- Link permanente
Although I certainly don't consider this movie to be Laurel & Hardy's best, it still is of course a very amusing short, that features plenty of good slapstick moments.
The movie is a bit dragging at times with its gags but overall the movie has plenty of moments in that will surely make you laugh. Especially the ending is purely classic. The slapstick comedy is very typically Laurel & Hardy like, so fans of the two will surely enjoy watching this comedy short.
Like often was the case with Laurel & Hardy, the movie can be divided into two parts. The first halve is about the comedy duo playing in a municipal band, while the second halve is about the two coping with the fact that they are fired from the band by trying to earn some money on the street by playing. Both parts have their up- and downsides but overall the upsides overcome its lesser parts.
The movie got directed by Edgar Kennedy, who also directed the other Laurel & Hardy silent short "From Soup To Nuts". Kennedy is still best known though as an actor playing in several Laurel & Hardy movies, most often as the cop Kennedy.
Amusing, especially for the fans.
7/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
The movie is a bit dragging at times with its gags but overall the movie has plenty of moments in that will surely make you laugh. Especially the ending is purely classic. The slapstick comedy is very typically Laurel & Hardy like, so fans of the two will surely enjoy watching this comedy short.
Like often was the case with Laurel & Hardy, the movie can be divided into two parts. The first halve is about the comedy duo playing in a municipal band, while the second halve is about the two coping with the fact that they are fired from the band by trying to earn some money on the street by playing. Both parts have their up- and downsides but overall the upsides overcome its lesser parts.
The movie got directed by Edgar Kennedy, who also directed the other Laurel & Hardy silent short "From Soup To Nuts". Kennedy is still best known though as an actor playing in several Laurel & Hardy movies, most often as the cop Kennedy.
Amusing, especially for the fans.
7/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
- Boba_Fett1138
- 11 de abr. de 2009
- Link permanente
More of a collection of loosely linked sketches than a plot, You're Darn Tootin' builds to a crescendo which finds a dozen men doing battle in the street without their trousers.
- JoeytheBrit
- 3 de mai. de 2020
- Link permanente
While I had actually never heard about the 1928 Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy movie "You're Darn Tootin'", before watching it here in 2025, of course I needed no persuasion to watch it, as it is after all a Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy movie.
Writer H. M. Walker put together a rather funny and enjoyable script and storyline. There are plenty of laughs and some well-written and nicely choreographed slapstick comedy in this particular movie.
Needless to say that you are in good and capable company when you sit down to watch a Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy movie. And the acting performances in "You're Darn Tootin'" are good.
This is definitely a movie that is well-worth sitting down to watch, regardless of you being a fan of Laurel and Hardy or not.
My rating of director Edgar Kennedy's 1928 movie "You're Darn Tootin'" lands on a well-deserved six out of ten stars.
Writer H. M. Walker put together a rather funny and enjoyable script and storyline. There are plenty of laughs and some well-written and nicely choreographed slapstick comedy in this particular movie.
Needless to say that you are in good and capable company when you sit down to watch a Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy movie. And the acting performances in "You're Darn Tootin'" are good.
This is definitely a movie that is well-worth sitting down to watch, regardless of you being a fan of Laurel and Hardy or not.
My rating of director Edgar Kennedy's 1928 movie "You're Darn Tootin'" lands on a well-deserved six out of ten stars.
- paul_haakonsen
- 23 de mai. de 2025
- Link permanente
WITH THE RELEASE of this 1928 silent, the LAUREL & HARDY team was established, complete and the L & H that we all know and have loved all of our lives. The only element missing is a soundtrack; and that may well have been an additional amenity.
MANY HAVE THEORIZED that YOU'RE DARN TOOTIN' may well have planned as a sound picture. If not a true "Talkie", it probably would have had the benefit of music and sound effects. It surely is an intriguing notion and there is plenty of 'circumstantial evidence' to support this notion.
BUT, SOUNDTRACK OR not, the 2 reeler marks a very important place in the history of Laurel & Hardy; as well as the direction that was taken by the HAL ROACH STUDIO. In it we find a well meshed Stan & Ollie, fully outfitted in their trademark bowlers (that's another name for derbies, Schultz), bow tie (Laurel) and necktie (Hardy). By this time, Stan Laurel had even adopted that scraggly, high topped hairdo.
THE OVERALL LOOK of this picture is both bright and realistically staged; with the vast portion of the filming being done out of doors. It is done mainly in the streets of Culver City in suburban LA. It was there that the HAL ROACH STUDIO was situated.
AS WAS THE case in all of the Roach product at that time (and for some years before),the titles were written by H.M. Walker. It was his wit and mastery of the King's English that added a real class to the silent films of L & H, Charley Chase, early Harold Lloyd, Snub Pollard and so many other series. Mr. Walker continued on the job after the ascent of the talkies, writing dialogue as well as those great title starters that typically were characteristic of L & H sound shorts.
ANOTHER ASPECT OF the title cards utilized at this juncture was an abandonment of those which consistently relied on humor which was unrelated to the story on the screen. These included both references to the habits of the characters, as well as giving them purposely outlandish sounding names. This was a regular over at Roach's good friend as well as his rival, Mack Sennett at KEYSTONE COMEDIES.
IN ADDITION TO opting for a more subtle and clever type of title, Roach and associates moved to do things much more s-l-o-w-l-y. Instead of rapid fire stacking the gags, one on top of the other, the writers and directors would exploit the gag situationals from every different angle. Their favourite ploy of presenting physical conflicts was dubbed "Reciprocal Destruction" by Roach Studio's supervising Director, Leo McCarey.
IN IT THE combatants would alternate in doing harm to each other or to the property of the other; all the while there was no attempt by either side to prevent any of the mayhem.
IT WAS LARGELY the efforts of Mr. McCarey and Stan Laurel that established this slow, deliberate style. It was also the principal that brought Stan Laurel's screen persona that we all are so familiar with. (Just you screen a Stan Laurel comedy from before the teaming with "Babe"-as Oliver Hardy was known to his friends).
SO THAT BRINGS us to the movie itself. We have already stated our opinion that YOU'RE DARN TOOTIN' was the zenith of the L & H series and established what was basically the 'finished product.' It is non-pretentious, smoothly conceived and truly funny. Its cleverly rendered pacing along with the chain-reaction like building of the final sequence all make it a primer for doing a comedy, short or not.
AND IT IS this finale that does its best to comply with the primary rule of comedy. That being: "Always Leave 'Em Laughing" *
NOTE: * The ending of Robert Youngson's compilation tribute film LAUREL & HARDY'S LAUGHING 20s (1965) uses this comic windup for its own ending.
MANY HAVE THEORIZED that YOU'RE DARN TOOTIN' may well have planned as a sound picture. If not a true "Talkie", it probably would have had the benefit of music and sound effects. It surely is an intriguing notion and there is plenty of 'circumstantial evidence' to support this notion.
BUT, SOUNDTRACK OR not, the 2 reeler marks a very important place in the history of Laurel & Hardy; as well as the direction that was taken by the HAL ROACH STUDIO. In it we find a well meshed Stan & Ollie, fully outfitted in their trademark bowlers (that's another name for derbies, Schultz), bow tie (Laurel) and necktie (Hardy). By this time, Stan Laurel had even adopted that scraggly, high topped hairdo.
THE OVERALL LOOK of this picture is both bright and realistically staged; with the vast portion of the filming being done out of doors. It is done mainly in the streets of Culver City in suburban LA. It was there that the HAL ROACH STUDIO was situated.
AS WAS THE case in all of the Roach product at that time (and for some years before),the titles were written by H.M. Walker. It was his wit and mastery of the King's English that added a real class to the silent films of L & H, Charley Chase, early Harold Lloyd, Snub Pollard and so many other series. Mr. Walker continued on the job after the ascent of the talkies, writing dialogue as well as those great title starters that typically were characteristic of L & H sound shorts.
ANOTHER ASPECT OF the title cards utilized at this juncture was an abandonment of those which consistently relied on humor which was unrelated to the story on the screen. These included both references to the habits of the characters, as well as giving them purposely outlandish sounding names. This was a regular over at Roach's good friend as well as his rival, Mack Sennett at KEYSTONE COMEDIES.
IN ADDITION TO opting for a more subtle and clever type of title, Roach and associates moved to do things much more s-l-o-w-l-y. Instead of rapid fire stacking the gags, one on top of the other, the writers and directors would exploit the gag situationals from every different angle. Their favourite ploy of presenting physical conflicts was dubbed "Reciprocal Destruction" by Roach Studio's supervising Director, Leo McCarey.
IN IT THE combatants would alternate in doing harm to each other or to the property of the other; all the while there was no attempt by either side to prevent any of the mayhem.
IT WAS LARGELY the efforts of Mr. McCarey and Stan Laurel that established this slow, deliberate style. It was also the principal that brought Stan Laurel's screen persona that we all are so familiar with. (Just you screen a Stan Laurel comedy from before the teaming with "Babe"-as Oliver Hardy was known to his friends).
SO THAT BRINGS us to the movie itself. We have already stated our opinion that YOU'RE DARN TOOTIN' was the zenith of the L & H series and established what was basically the 'finished product.' It is non-pretentious, smoothly conceived and truly funny. Its cleverly rendered pacing along with the chain-reaction like building of the final sequence all make it a primer for doing a comedy, short or not.
AND IT IS this finale that does its best to comply with the primary rule of comedy. That being: "Always Leave 'Em Laughing" *
NOTE: * The ending of Robert Youngson's compilation tribute film LAUREL & HARDY'S LAUGHING 20s (1965) uses this comic windup for its own ending.
- redryan64
- 23 de mai. de 2015
- Link permanente
YOU'RE DARN TOOTIN'
Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
Sound format: Silent
(Black and white - Short film)
Fired from an orchestra for causing havoc, Stan 'n' Ollie become street musicians and spark a near-riot...
Directed by comedy star Edgar Kennedy (originally billed as 'E. Livingston Kennedy'), this silent L&H short builds toward a climactic set-piece in which a large crowd of people are drawn into their personal squabble, resulting in complete anarchy (see also HATS OFF and PERFECT DAY for a similar scenario), largely because Stan is unwilling to suffer Ollie's bullying behavior, a dynamic which figured heavily in many of their silent entries. An earlier sequence, in which they ruin an orchestral presentation in the local park, sending conductor Otto Lederer into an apoplectic rage, is staged and executed with note-perfect precision. Originally released in the UK as THE MUSIC BLASTERS.
Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
Sound format: Silent
(Black and white - Short film)
Fired from an orchestra for causing havoc, Stan 'n' Ollie become street musicians and spark a near-riot...
Directed by comedy star Edgar Kennedy (originally billed as 'E. Livingston Kennedy'), this silent L&H short builds toward a climactic set-piece in which a large crowd of people are drawn into their personal squabble, resulting in complete anarchy (see also HATS OFF and PERFECT DAY for a similar scenario), largely because Stan is unwilling to suffer Ollie's bullying behavior, a dynamic which figured heavily in many of their silent entries. An earlier sequence, in which they ruin an orchestral presentation in the local park, sending conductor Otto Lederer into an apoplectic rage, is staged and executed with note-perfect precision. Originally released in the UK as THE MUSIC BLASTERS.
- Libretio
- 23 de fev. de 2005
- Link permanente
- Prichards12345
- 14 de nov. de 2015
- Link permanente
- jboothmillard
- 24 de mai. de 2009
- Link permanente
You're Darn Tootin', released in 1928, is one of Laurel & Hardy's last silent shorts. There is no high-brow humor, no Andy Kaufman what's-he-really-doing-here angst, and the closest thing to sophisticated word play comes when Stan throws Ollie's horn under a steam roller and, after trying to get the now half-inch thick instrument to toot, Ollie deadpans to the camera and a placard announces "It's flat."
You can see the fine hand of legendary comedic actor Edgar Kennedy in his direction. Kennedy's fortes the slow burn and intricate interactions with props are the centerpieces here, from the fiddle bow and music sheet sequence early on to the gradual acceleration from annoyance to mayhem and utter anarchy at the end.
Stan and Ollie destroy a band concert, get fired, evicted, and fight with each other and everyone else who so much as passes by. The big finale is the infamous pants-ripping scene. "You're Darn Tootin'" is pure slapstick and low-brow humor. It's also the funniest twenty minutes ever committed to film.
Warning: do not watch this film without a change of underwear available.
You can see the fine hand of legendary comedic actor Edgar Kennedy in his direction. Kennedy's fortes the slow burn and intricate interactions with props are the centerpieces here, from the fiddle bow and music sheet sequence early on to the gradual acceleration from annoyance to mayhem and utter anarchy at the end.
Stan and Ollie destroy a band concert, get fired, evicted, and fight with each other and everyone else who so much as passes by. The big finale is the infamous pants-ripping scene. "You're Darn Tootin'" is pure slapstick and low-brow humor. It's also the funniest twenty minutes ever committed to film.
Warning: do not watch this film without a change of underwear available.
- clarkpark-1
- 17 de mar. de 2007
- Link permanente
This is a highly entertaining Laurel and Hardy short from the silent era.
Plot In a Nutshell: Two unemployed and recently homeless musicians turn to panhandling, with disastrous results.
Why I rated it an '8': Simply put, it had me laughing or at least smiling throughout the entire 20 minutes. I don't know if any moment reaches the heights of their absolute best work, but there are plenty of funny moments here. From the band stand to the lodging house to the city streets, Laurel and Hardy bring their "A" game to this loose collection of sketches woven into a story. The highlight is unquestionably the finale, where no less than 15-20 men engage in a pants-ripping melee that will leave you in stitches. I sure was!
8/10. Would I watch again (Y/N)?: Yes, absolutely. Good stuff!
Plot In a Nutshell: Two unemployed and recently homeless musicians turn to panhandling, with disastrous results.
Why I rated it an '8': Simply put, it had me laughing or at least smiling throughout the entire 20 minutes. I don't know if any moment reaches the heights of their absolute best work, but there are plenty of funny moments here. From the band stand to the lodging house to the city streets, Laurel and Hardy bring their "A" game to this loose collection of sketches woven into a story. The highlight is unquestionably the finale, where no less than 15-20 men engage in a pants-ripping melee that will leave you in stitches. I sure was!
8/10. Would I watch again (Y/N)?: Yes, absolutely. Good stuff!
- Better_Sith_Than_Sorry
- 3 de mai. de 2021
- Link permanente
"You're Darn Tootin" is yet another classic Laurel and Hardy shorts and is worthy of a far higher rating than what it has! Stan and Ollie are musicians who are fired by the orchestra's band leader after a disastrous concert at the beginning of the film. Upon being cast out onto the street after failing to pay their rent, Stan and Ollie attempt to make a living from being street musicians. The results are less than satisfactory! An argument ensues between them until an entire crowd is involved in a trouser- ripping brawl. I couldn't stop laughing as more innocent bystanders became unwittingly embroiled! The flow of gags follows very smoothly and naturally. Creativity from Laurel and the gag writers was quite exceptional.
- alexanderdavies-99382
- 29 de jul. de 2017
- Link permanente
- BJJManchester
- 16 de mai. de 2007
- Link permanente
- theowinthrop
- 9 de ago. de 2007
- Link permanente
I thought this was the funniest Laurel and Hardy silent short I've ever watched. I would also include it as being one of their funniest against their best sound films. Like all of the shorts, it's two stories joined together. In this case the boys are in a orchestra that they destroy, then they are poor in the streets and destroy society. It's the second half that I found unexpectedly funny to the point that I was worried I may mess up some stiches I have currently on my face! It's on Prime video. The Blackhawk print they show has a synchronized soundtrack that is used to exceptional effect at the end when society is torn apart! Edgar Kennedy directed. 10 of 10.
- verbusen
- 27 de dez. de 2020
- Link permanente
- Steamcarrot
- 5 de jan. de 2007
- Link permanente
You're Darn Tootin' has Laurel and Hardy as members of a municipal band, known for causing the conductor ample amounts of grief with their incompetence and clueless way of going about things. After their antics cause them to be kicked out of the band, they come home to realize their landlady has evicted them because of their lack of employment. The men try their luck at being street musicians, scraping by by the courtesy dimes and nickles people throw into the cups adjacent to them, but to little avail, as the two consistently argue and even engage in arguments with innocent passersby.
Noted Laurel and Hardy scholar Randy Skretvedt notes You're Darn Tootin' not so much as a comedy but as a painfully honest display of friendship and helplessness. Even when Laurel and Hardy are without a job, a home, and knowledge of where there next meal will come from, they cling to each other, and even if they fight and bicker with one another, one pretty quickly realizes these two couldn't live without one another by their side. It's an paradoxical friendship that has stood the test of time and cinema, but Laurel and Hardy deserved to be bound together for eternity, through all the needless slap-fighting and goofball situations.
You're Darn Tootin' is less a comedy short and more a nimble exploration at the kind of paradoxical friendship these two characters embody. While, of course, being humorous and delightfully unpredictable, Laurel and Hardy's relationship has pals is explored in a richer sense and, with that, we get a short that embodies really what it's like to have that one friend that you can't live with but can't live without.
Starring: Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. Directed by: Edgar Kennedy.
Noted Laurel and Hardy scholar Randy Skretvedt notes You're Darn Tootin' not so much as a comedy but as a painfully honest display of friendship and helplessness. Even when Laurel and Hardy are without a job, a home, and knowledge of where there next meal will come from, they cling to each other, and even if they fight and bicker with one another, one pretty quickly realizes these two couldn't live without one another by their side. It's an paradoxical friendship that has stood the test of time and cinema, but Laurel and Hardy deserved to be bound together for eternity, through all the needless slap-fighting and goofball situations.
You're Darn Tootin' is less a comedy short and more a nimble exploration at the kind of paradoxical friendship these two characters embody. While, of course, being humorous and delightfully unpredictable, Laurel and Hardy's relationship has pals is explored in a richer sense and, with that, we get a short that embodies really what it's like to have that one friend that you can't live with but can't live without.
Starring: Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. Directed by: Edgar Kennedy.
- StevePulaski
- 25 de set. de 2014
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This amusing, clever short feature is a pretty good example of the way that Laurel & Hardy, at their best, could get a lot of mileage out of a few simple ideas. While many of the gags have been done before, frequently by Stan and Ollie themselves, the material works and provides good laughs thanks to their expert timing, funny mannerisms, and creative use of props. The wild sidewalk fracas is probably the best-remembered part of "You're Darn Tootin'", but perhaps the wittiest sequence is the opening scene on the bandstand, which packs quite a few laughs into a short time. Any Laurel & Hardy fan should enjoy this one.
- Snow Leopard
- 24 de abr. de 2002
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- planktonrules
- 2 de mai. de 2007
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I first read about this Laurel & Hardy short in Randy Skretvedt's book "Laurel and Hardy: The Magic Behind the Movies". Then I saw the ending clip in Robert Youngston's first silent comedy compilation called The Golden Age of Comedy. I later bought the VHS tape of the film from Hal Roach Studios and now I've watched it on Hulu as linked from IMDb. As directed by Edgar Kennedy, who previously was with the boys in Leave 'Em Laughing, this was funny from start to finish from when they make a shambles of the band they're playing with to doing that to themselves on the street playing on their own to their fight with each other leading to lots of passersby getting caught in the chaos. Stan & Ollie drive each other crazy constantly with Stan, at this point, giving it as good as he gets instead of usually taking it which is quite refreshing to see but since other people are even worse to them, they really have no one but themselves to depend on. That's even more refreshing and it's for that reason that this team is considered one of the greatest ever in movies. I think I've said enough, so on that note, You're Darn Tootin' is highly recommended.
- tavm
- 1 de ago. de 2011
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Stan and Ollie are performers in one of those bands that used to play concerts in the park on Sundays. After about a reel of messing that up, there's a short intermission in the action, until they get thrown out of their boarding house. They decide to go into business for themselves as street musicians.
It's a solid comedy for the first half, with some nice manhole jokes and visual puns, but it's the finale that makes this one of the best of the silent L&H shorts. Stan and Ollie get to scrapping, and then others interfere.... to their sorrow. It's beautifully paced to end on a high note.
It's a solid comedy for the first half, with some nice manhole jokes and visual puns, but it's the finale that makes this one of the best of the silent L&H shorts. Stan and Ollie get to scrapping, and then others interfere.... to their sorrow. It's beautifully paced to end on a high note.
- boblipton
- 27 de jun. de 2022
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You're Darn Tootin' (1928)
** (out of 4)
Pretty flat Laurel and Hardy film has the boys playing musicians who get fired from their job and then evicted from their apartment. There's really not a single laugh until the end when a street riot breaks out due to the boy's bad music.
Slipping Wives (1927)
** 1/2 (out of 4)
A woman fears her husband isn't interested in her anymore so she pays a stranger (Laurel) to pretend to be her lover. This was later remade by L&H as The Fixer Uppers, which is better than this here. Hardy plays the butler but this was a pre-L&H team film so the two spend most of the time apart, although there one fight scene together is certainly the highlight.
** (out of 4)
Pretty flat Laurel and Hardy film has the boys playing musicians who get fired from their job and then evicted from their apartment. There's really not a single laugh until the end when a street riot breaks out due to the boy's bad music.
Slipping Wives (1927)
** 1/2 (out of 4)
A woman fears her husband isn't interested in her anymore so she pays a stranger (Laurel) to pretend to be her lover. This was later remade by L&H as The Fixer Uppers, which is better than this here. Hardy plays the butler but this was a pre-L&H team film so the two spend most of the time apart, although there one fight scene together is certainly the highlight.
- Michael_Elliott
- 12 de mar. de 2008
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