Comic adventures of newlyweds and children.Comic adventures of newlyweds and children.Comic adventures of newlyweds and children.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Jack Morgan
- The Disturbance
- (as Jackie Morgan)
Jack Edwards
- The Annoyance
- (as Jackie Edwards)
Roy Brooks
- Man in Chauffeured Car
- (uncredited)
Evelyn Burns
- Passerby in Aigrette Hat
- (uncredited)
Dorothy Cassil
- Distracting Girl in Cloche Hat
- (uncredited)
William Gillespie
- Brother-in-Law
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
This Harold Lloyd comedy has some funny sequences that are enjoyable to watch, even though it is somewhat uneven overall. Lloyd himself is always funny, and it is only a matter of providing him with decent material in order to make for good comedy. This feature pulls together several sequences with comedy ideas that very somewhat in their level of creativity, and that do not always fit together all that well.
Lloyd and Mildred Davis star as a young married couple. One of the interesting aspects of the movie is the short animated sequence at the beginning, which apparently replaced a reel of material that did not turn out as well as everyone had hoped. The main body of the film as it stands follows Lloyd and Davis as they contend with Prohibition, baby-sit some troublesome children, and deal with a neighborhood burglary threat.
A number of the gag ideas work well, and the two stars also get some help from imposing Noah Young in the second half of the movie. The young child playing their nephew is also quite believable as a young trouble-maker. There are a few stretches of relatively routine slapstick material, but the good parts make it worth seeing.
Lloyd and Mildred Davis star as a young married couple. One of the interesting aspects of the movie is the short animated sequence at the beginning, which apparently replaced a reel of material that did not turn out as well as everyone had hoped. The main body of the film as it stands follows Lloyd and Davis as they contend with Prohibition, baby-sit some troublesome children, and deal with a neighborhood burglary threat.
A number of the gag ideas work well, and the two stars also get some help from imposing Noah Young in the second half of the movie. The young child playing their nephew is also quite believable as a young trouble-maker. There are a few stretches of relatively routine slapstick material, but the good parts make it worth seeing.
- Snow Leopard
- Oct 23, 2005
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film originally was three reels, but it was cut to two after lukewarm receptions by preview audiences.
- GoofsWhen The Boy (Harold Lloyd) places the baby (aka, The Annoyance) on the sofa, the baby rolls forward onto its stomach. In the next shot, the baby is back on its back; it would not yet have the core strength to roll onto its back at that age.
- Quotes
Intertitle: There are three brands of brothers-in-law - The "Gimmies," the "Let Me Haves", and, the "Do Me A Favor" kind.
- Crazy credits(under the cast opening credits) Time, Place, Plot --- Lost in the rush.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- I Do
- Filming locations
- 7000 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, USA(opening shot of Lloyd walking across the street)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime22 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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