Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAlfalfa fantasizing about a football career at the expense of his homework and the resulting consequences.Alfalfa fantasizing about a football career at the expense of his homework and the resulting consequences.Alfalfa fantasizing about a football career at the expense of his homework and the resulting consequences.
Fotos
Robert Blake
- Mickey
- (não creditado)
Gloria Browne
- Spanky's Dance Partner
- (não creditado)
Hugh Chapman
- Kid Who Speaks to Mickey
- (não creditado)
Shirley Coates
- Muggsy
- (não creditado)
James Gubitosi
- College Student
- (não creditado)
Paul Hilton
- Alfalfa's Roommate
- (não creditado)
Darla Hood
- Darla
- (não creditado)
Janice Hood
- Girl at Pep Rally
- (não creditado)
Dickie Humphreys
- Dancer
- (não creditado)
- …
Payne B. Johnson
- College Student
- (não creditado)
Darwood Kaye
- Waldo
- (não creditado)
Larry Kert
- Tap Dance Soloist
- (não creditado)
Sidney Kibrick
- Football Player
- (não creditado)
Jo Jo La Savio
- Kid Behind Leonard in Goldfish Scene
- (não creditado)
Leonard 'Percy' Landy
- Leonard
- (não creditado)
Rae-Nell Laskey
- Dancer
- (não creditado)
- …
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
There IS a gag -- at the very beginning. Then Alfalfa's humorless dad comes in and starts lecturing the poor freckled dope about how he can't give up his studies. We go to a college fantasy done completely straight and without an ounce of humor in it. Alfalfa's about to be the hero of the big football game when Waldo arbitrarily marches in and, um, tells him that he can't. And that's the only reason why you shouldn't neglect your studies, because the college you go to won't let you win their football games unless your grades are good. Sure.
Of course, Alfalfa believes what his father tells him, does an about face and does some more stilted lecturing to his friends. Wow. I'm inspired.
Pretty much the solid example of how MGM was driving this thing into the ground. Fortunately the next two entries would provide more in the way of entertainment.
Of course, Alfalfa believes what his father tells him, does an about face and does some more stilted lecturing to his friends. Wow. I'm inspired.
Pretty much the solid example of how MGM was driving this thing into the ground. Fortunately the next two entries would provide more in the way of entertainment.
"Time Out For Lessons" was a pretty good short, it is okay to have fun, as long as you do not neglect your schoolwork, his friends were pretty furious when they heard that he did not study before the big game. I give this short *******out of**********.
An OUR GANG Comedy Short.
With the help of his dad, Alfalfa imagines what it would be like in college, when, as a football hero, he is ineligible to play in the big game because he neglected his TIME OUT FOR LESSONS.
This little movie with a moral, made when the Rascals were a bit older, is thoroughly unfunny. Only the jitterbugging scene - with Darla belting out `Swinging The Jinx Away' - has any pep to it.
With the help of his dad, Alfalfa imagines what it would be like in college, when, as a football hero, he is ineligible to play in the big game because he neglected his TIME OUT FOR LESSONS.
This little movie with a moral, made when the Rascals were a bit older, is thoroughly unfunny. Only the jitterbugging scene - with Darla belting out `Swinging The Jinx Away' - has any pep to it.
I beg to differ with critics such as Leonard Maltin and others who critiqued it as a humorless, moralizing short. I saw humor in the dance scene, in Coach Spanky and Leonard Landy, in both of the dorm and locker room scenes, and the reaction of the kids at the end to the statement by Alfalfa "from now on we take time out for lessons" as if they weren't taking the statement seriously in undertones of "sure, yeah, and I bet". Even the way Alfalfa expressed the statement came across as mocking. The only one who seemed serious and didactic was Alfalfa's dad. I found more humor in this short than such Our Gang classics as "Fly My Kite" and "Dogs is Dogs". I viewed it not as a moralizing short but a moralizing spoof.
Time Out For Lessons serves as just another example of how MGM ruined the Our Gang series by substituting messages for comedy. Here we see 12-year old Alfalfa fantasizing about a football career at the expense of his homework and the resulting consequences. About the best thing that can be said for this entry is that with the exception of Mickey (Robert Blake) Gubitosi, it lacks the increasingly obnoxious cast that would later infect the series as the old Hal Roach cast outgrew their roles. This is slight comfort compared to having to sit through a humorless one-reel "comedy." Hal Roach would never let this script on the set. MGM would produce a total of 52 Our Gang shorts from 1938-43 (released into 1944), perhaps 5 of them approach the level of the earlier Roach-produced entries. Time Out For Lessons isn't one of them!
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesNot only is that Larry Kert, Broadway's original Tony from "West Side Story", doing the featured tap dance, he is dancing to a instrumental big band arrangement of "The Jitterbug", a song that was deleted from MGM's O Mágico de Oz (1939) earlier in same year.
- Citações
Alfalfa's Roommate: Don't you think you should do a little studying Alfalfa?
Alfalfa: No. What do I need to study for? Ain't I the best halfback that Hayle ever had?
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Locações de filme
- Rose Bowl - 1001 Rose Bowl Drive, Pasadena, Califórnia, EUA(football stadium - archive footage)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 20.390 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração10 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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