Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe stooges get jobs as census takers and wind up in a fancy mansion looking for people to survey. Moe and Larry are recruited to join a bridge game, while Curly adds Alum to the lemonade. T... Ler tudoThe stooges get jobs as census takers and wind up in a fancy mansion looking for people to survey. Moe and Larry are recruited to join a bridge game, while Curly adds Alum to the lemonade. The resulting concoction is consumed by everyone, resulting in puckered lips and shrunken c... Ler tudoThe stooges get jobs as census takers and wind up in a fancy mansion looking for people to survey. Moe and Larry are recruited to join a bridge game, while Curly adds Alum to the lemonade. The resulting concoction is consumed by everyone, resulting in puckered lips and shrunken clothes. The boys next try to take the census at a football stadium. They disguise themselv... Ler tudo
- Moe
- (as Moe)
- Larry
- (as Larry)
- Curly
- (as Curly)
- Football Player #20
- (não creditado)
- Bridge Party Hostess
- (não creditado)
- Storekeeper
- (não creditado)
- Moe's Bridge Partner
- (não creditado)
- Maid
- (não creditado)
- Stadium Guard
- (não creditado)
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
- Napping Man
- (não creditado)
- Bridge Player
- (não creditado)
- Referee
- (não creditado)
- Slapping Lady in Street
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
The Stooges find themselves as census takers, getting paid four cents a person to write down each citizens' particulars. Their job takes them inside a sprawling mansion where the owner is hosting a bridge game. While preparing the party's punch Curly pours in Alum, a pickling preservative he thinks is sugar. Once the guests drink the stuff they pucker up when conversing, creating a hilarious situation where words are barely intelligible. Still on the job, the Stooges end up at a college football game attempting to get census information on the players. Just before entering the football arena filled with a hundred thousand fans, the Stooges hear the roar of the spectators, prompting Curly to say, "Maybe it's the Fourth of July!" Moe retorts, "The Fourth of July in October?" "You never can tell," Curly says. "Look what they did to Thanksgiving." Today's viewers scratch their heads asking what happened back then to our Pilgrim-inspired holiday. Since Abraham Lincoln's time, Thanksgiving was celebrated on the last Thursday in November. But President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1939 pushed back Turkey Day to the third week of the month to allow an extra week for Christmas shopping, pleasing business owners who loved shoppers to have one more week to spend their money, but angering many state governors and the public. FDR's mandate lasted three years until Congress passed a law permanently resetting Thanksgiving to the fourth Thursday of the month.
Hollywood films shown in general public movie theaters were required to be stamped with an approval from the Hays Office, named after the first president of the Motion Picture Association of America, William Harrison Hays, the chief censor for Hollywood movies before Joseph Breen took charge. Moe says the Stooges just got a job working for the Census. A confused Curly asks, "Will Hays?" thinking they've become censors for the movies. Nyuk, Nyuk, Nyuk.
The Stooges also loved to throw several inside jokes into their movies. Curly and Larry play a joke on Moe, who unknowingly thinks he's canvassing others when its really his partners, asking them where they were born. "Lake Winnipesaukee (a lake in New Hampshire)," Curly answers. Moe says, "How do you spell that?" "W-O ... woof! Make it Lake Erie I got an Uncle there!" Curly responds. Moe, still unaware it's Curly he's talking to, replies, "What was your family decomposed of?" "Well, I'll tell ya! There was a litter of three, and I was the one they kept!" Curly says, reminding viewers his last name was Howard, the real brother to Moe Howard, with Shemp, a later addition to the Stooges, the third. A scene later, Moe approaches a man with a newspaper over his head sleeping on a couch. Moe asks, "Pardon me sir, but I'm taking census, where were you born?" Larry, who's reclining on a nearby couch not in Moe's sites, answers, "Lake Winnipesaukee." Moe: Lake Winnip-how many in the family?" Larry: "I was one of a litter of three." Moe: "Now don't tell me you're the one they kept!" Larry: "Nah, I was the one they threw away!" Larry Fine was not a member of the Howard family even though he was the original member of the Stooges.
The boys are homeless again, this time sleeping on a big awning outside a pawn shop (the "Square Deal Swap Shop"). When the shop owner opens for the day and pulls the cord, the boys, naturally, fall to the sidewalk. Less than a minute later, after breaking some of the merchandise, the cops are after them. They inadvertently get into a line (a gag we see often in Stooges films) and become "census takers."
"Hey, we're working for the census,"" says Moe.
"You mean we're working for Will Hays?," responds Curly. Classic film buffs will know who he is referring to.
I like the answer Moe gets when he rings the doorbell and asks the man who appears, "I'm a census taker. You are married or happy?"
The longest gag of the short film was the above-mentioned alum scene and all the actors did a great job of puckering up their mouths after drinking this specially-made punch, especially Vernon Dent and Marjorie Kane.
As Curly sums it up: "Roses are red and how do you do? Drink four of these and woo-woo-woo-woo!!"
*** (out of 4)
Funny short has the Three Stooges wrecking a second hand store so they have to run from a cop and end up ducking into a line for census people. Now with a new job the boys head out to gather some census and it doesn't take long for them to get in trouble when they try to enter a high society bridge game and then a football game. This Columbia short finds Moe, Larry and Curly in fine form as we get one good laugh after another. The opening sequence with the boys crashing down was certainly a good way to introduce them and things just pick up from here. I think the best moments happen inside the bridge game where Curly accidentally puts alum in some punch and soon everyone is going around with puckered up lips. Another great sequence as Curly flirting with an attractive maid and this here gets plenty of nice laughs. The football game sequence isn't classic Stooges but this too manages to get some laughs and especially one scene where Curly tries to get some answers from a quarterback who is really calling out plays. At just under 20-minutes this short goes by without any weak spots so fans of the Stooges should enjoy it and it's also good enough to show someone unfamiliar with the boys just to show them what the legends were made of.
I guess the best stuff comes from the very beginning: the stooges falling out of the awning--nice no-look punch from Moe on Larry--the census and the football game.
Not a damn thing wrong with this short...
The greatest laugh of this episode, however, was very subtle and likely unscripted. During the bridge game, as Fifi (the maid) handed out silver goblets of gourmet punch, Moe attempted to make eye contact with her and then lowered his head to take a gander at her rear end as she walked away. Love it!
Watch this short. And then watch it again. It's that good.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesJust before the boys go to the football game, they hear a commotion in the distance. Curly Howard says, "Maybe it's the Fourth of July!" Moe Howard replies, "The Fourth of July in October?" Curly answers, "You never can tell. Look what they did to Thanksgiving." This reference is lost on most people today, but before 1939 Thanksgiving was not a fixed date, it relied on a Presidential Thanksgiving Proclamation each year. President Abraham Lincoln began the national holiday in 1863 and most people were used to Thanksgiving being the last Thursday of November. In 1939 (the year before this short was released), President Franklin D. Roosevelt changed the date of the national holiday, much to the disagreement of many states' governors and their citizens. This change added an extra week of holiday shopping, which pleased business leaders. The move was quite controversial and it wasn't until the end of 1941 that Congress passed a law to settle the dispute and establish the "fourth Thursday" of November as Thanksgiving Day.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhile entering the kitchen with Curly, Moe sat down at the table with his census folder. After a few pokes and slaps, he exited the kitchen without it, leaving it laying on the table. He then immediately entered the living room with folder in hand.
- Citações
Moe: Now, calm yourself. We're census takers, madam. How old are you?
Larry: What address is this?
Lady having bridge party: One hundred and two.
Moe: You don't look a day over eighty.
Lady having bridge party: Young man, I'm twenty-nine.
Moe: Oh, yeah?
Lady having bridge party: Well, how do I look?
Moe: Oh, you look like a million.
Larry: Ah, she can't be that old. (Larry and Moe open her mouth and check her teeth.) Forty-three.
Moe: Fifty.
Larry: Forty-three!
Moe: Fifty!
Larry: Forty-three!
Moe: Fifty, fifty, fifty, fifty, fifty, fifty, (mouth begins to move much faster) fifty, fifty, fifty, fifty, fifty, fifty, fifty, fifty, fifty...
Curly: Sooold American!
- ConexõesEdited into The Three Stooges: Volume VIII (1982)
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- No Answer, No Feeling
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- Tempo de duração17 minutos
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- 1.37 : 1