Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe stooges are down and out. With a cop chasing them, they flee into an artists studio where they are mistaken for students. The cop continues to hunt for them and they use a variety of dis... Ler tudoThe stooges are down and out. With a cop chasing them, they flee into an artists studio where they are mistaken for students. The cop continues to hunt for them and they use a variety of disguises and tactics to elude him. A wild clay throwing fight ends the film.The stooges are down and out. With a cop chasing them, they flee into an artists studio where they are mistaken for students. The cop continues to hunt for them and they use a variety of disguises and tactics to elude him. A wild clay throwing fight ends the film.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Moe
- (as Moe)
- Larry
- (as Larry)
- Curley
- (as Curley)
- Prof. Fuller
- (não creditado)
- Art Student
- (não creditado)
- Art Student
- (não creditado)
- Model in Tights
- (não creditado)
- Art Student
- (não creditado)
- Bearded Man
- (não creditado)
- Shop Keeper
- (não creditado)
- Girl Playing Hopscotch
- (não creditado)
- Woman in Car
- (não creditado)
- Girl Playing Hopscotch
- (não creditado)
- Man Curly Asks for a Meal
- (não creditado)
- Art Student
- (não creditado)
- Laughing Art Student
- (não creditado)
- Plainclothesman
- (não creditado)
- Model in Black Gown
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
A rich man stops in front of Curly and inquires about him. "I haven't had a bite of food in three days, mister," says Curly. "Well," the man answers, "I wouldn't worry about it. It still tastes the same." Wow - it's a cold world out there!
The boys, through circumstances, wind up being chased by a cop, a familiar storyline, filled with gags as the latter is never able to catch our three heroes. The guys wind up in an art studio posing as artists....and the cornball jokes and sight gags really begin in earnest. Most of them, to be honest, aren't the greatest.
However, the story is redeemed in the last three minutes when a mud- fight (at least it looks like big gobs of mud) ensues in the studio and all mayhem breaks loose, leading to some funny slapstick.
It's safe to say Adler borrowed the "guys on the street" Depression scene from Laurel and Hardy, usually being chased by the cops for vagrancy. Same deal with the Stooges, managing to give the coppers the slip and dash into an artsy art school. Here we see lots of new gags, no doubt suggested by Del Lord, foremost Moe's famous "two fingers" poke in Curly's eyeballs. YOUCH! Curly also gets to walk around in drag! -- which would become a laugh out loud bit for years to come, opening the door to even more bizarro story ideas and routines.
And why not put to good use some of that modeling clay in the studio, right? New-found artists Moe, Larry and Curly get into a whopper of a clay fight, again thanks to Lord's creativity. As expected, this would inspire the famous (gooooey, crunchy, wall-splattering) Stooge pie fights over the next two decades.
Fun fact; Moe and Larry's young daughters are seen playing hopscotch in a bit part. Silent film comedian Bobby Burns plays Professor Fuller, also a dirctor of many early films like Del Lord. Interestingly, Lord would direct one comedy for the BOWERY BOYS in the 40s.
Always on remastered Columbia dvd, box sets generally ranging from each decade; 30s, 40s and 50s episodes. Many thanks to METV for running these gems Saturday nights.
Lord had been one of Keystone Cops characters early in the Mack Sennett studio days, appearing as the squad's driver. Once the Depression shut down the Sennett facility, Lord worked for producer Hal Roach before he saw himself employed at a relative's used car dealership. Producer Jules White talked with Lord who was showing him a Buick when he realized who the salesman was. He had Columbia hire him to work with the Stooges. Lord shaped many aspects of the trio's on-screen antics, which lasted until he moved onto other projects in 1948.
"Pop Goes the Easel," a takeoff of the Stooges' earlier "Pop Goes the Weasel" short, finds the Stooges chased by a police detective who mistakes them for broom thieves. The three seek refuge in an art class, where they pose as French art students. Cornered in the studio, Curly dresses for the first time as a woman, a disguise he adopts in several future episodes (Moe and Larry also are seen in drag). Moe debuts his fist maneuver as he presents his clutch hand in front of Curly, asking "See this?" Curly hits the fist by exclaiming "Yeah," only to have Moe swing his arm broadly before he bops Curly on top of the head. In another stroke of genius, Moe commands Curly to pick two fingers. He innocently selects the index and middle finger, only to see Moe poke him in the eyes.
In another scene that rarely has Moe slapping others besides his two sidekicks, a circle of art students surrounds the three as clay is flung in every direction. Moe asks, "Who started this?" Larry responsed, "You did!" Moe's reaction is to yell "Oh Yeah?" which he proceeded to whip his open-hand around, slapping several bystanders in the face.
The highlight of "Pop Goes the Easel," however, is the clay fight involving everyone in the room and those who are entering. On a variation of the classic pie fights seen in earlier comedy shorts, clay is seen in abundance in the studio since it's used mostly for the student sculptors. Larry shows that clay, which is used for sculpturing, can also be made into a three dimensional painting by throwing a clump onto the canvas. He misses, hitting one of the Stooges, setting off a madcap scene where everyone throws clay everywhere.
In an earlier scene, while the Stooges are being chased by the detective on the city sidewalks, two girls are playing hopscotch. One is Larry's daughter, Phyllis, and the other was Jean, Moe's daughter. Jean Howard Maurer was seven at the time of filming and became a character actress who wrote two books on the Three Stooges and co-authored three more. Living to 94, she was the last living person to appear alongside her uncle Curly on screen. Jean died in September 2021.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe two little girls playing hopscotch are the daughters of Larry Fine and Moe Howard. Before Moe's daughter Joan died in 2021 she was the oldest living person to have appeared on screen with her uncle Curly.
- Erros de gravaçãoJust before Moe asks Larry how to spell "chrysanthemum," his clip-on tie falls off. When he is seen again being accused of stealing the shopkeeper's brooms, his tie is clipped on again.
- Citações
Larry: [after Moe has whistled for he and Curley to come to his side] What's the matter?
Moe: How do you spell "chrysanthemum"?
Larry: [thinks for a moment, looking confused]
Moe: Oh, ignorant, eh?
[slaps Larry, turns to Curley]
Moe: How do you spell it?
Curley: [very quickly] C-h-r-y-s-a-n-t-h-e-m-u-m.
Moe: [pause] Why weren't you here a minute ago?
[slaps Curley]
- Versões alternativasIn 2006, a computer colorized version was released as part of Columbia's "ChromaChoice" collection in a DVD entitled "The Three Stooges: Stooges on the Run".
- ConexõesEdited into The Three Stooges: Volume III (1982)
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Pop Goes the Easel
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 20 min
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1