A chef helps a housewife cook a duck dinner that will not give her husband indigestion.A chef helps a housewife cook a duck dinner that will not give her husband indigestion.A chef helps a housewife cook a duck dinner that will not give her husband indigestion.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 nomination total
Pete Smith
- Narrator
- (voice)
Luis Alberni
- The Master Chef
- (uncredited)
Una Merkel
- Mrs. Omsk
- (uncredited)
Franklin Pangborn
- John Xavier Omsk
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
I love these little "one reel wonders" that TCM throws in at the end of their regularly scheduled movies as filler till the next movie comes on. I caught this one at the end of Sunrise, during TCM's 31 Days of Oscar. Seems this little 1933 one-reeler was nominated for Best Short Subject.
It's very amusing. An early technicolor about a man with indigestion, thanks to a wife who's a klutzenheimer in the kitchen. Una Merkel plays the dippy wife -- she utters about 3 words but is told by the unseen narrator that he's the only one allowed to talk! The narrator acts as an omnipotent overseer, putting broken eggs and spilled condiments back together again by the magic of reverse-action filming. He also brings in a chef in a puff of smoke, to come to the housewife's rescue. We are then treated to a mini-cooking show, with instructions on how to prepare stuffed duck and baked apples. It's quite droll, with the narrator getting off such funny zingers as:
"Cook the stuffing for 15 minutes, for that perfect taste that you love to burp up later."
"Now clutch the apple firmly so it will realize the futility of any resistance."
Very funny and amusing. Too bad there's no way to actually know when this will be on again. I don't think TCM lists its one-reel wonders in its programming guide, which is too bad. Well, if you run across "The Menu" at the end of your regularly scheduled program, be sure to stick around and watch it. I think you'll enjoy it!
It's very amusing. An early technicolor about a man with indigestion, thanks to a wife who's a klutzenheimer in the kitchen. Una Merkel plays the dippy wife -- she utters about 3 words but is told by the unseen narrator that he's the only one allowed to talk! The narrator acts as an omnipotent overseer, putting broken eggs and spilled condiments back together again by the magic of reverse-action filming. He also brings in a chef in a puff of smoke, to come to the housewife's rescue. We are then treated to a mini-cooking show, with instructions on how to prepare stuffed duck and baked apples. It's quite droll, with the narrator getting off such funny zingers as:
"Cook the stuffing for 15 minutes, for that perfect taste that you love to burp up later."
"Now clutch the apple firmly so it will realize the futility of any resistance."
Very funny and amusing. Too bad there's no way to actually know when this will be on again. I don't think TCM lists its one-reel wonders in its programming guide, which is too bad. Well, if you run across "The Menu" at the end of your regularly scheduled program, be sure to stick around and watch it. I think you'll enjoy it!
- Ursula_Two_Point_Seven_T
- Feb 10, 2006
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaA very rare Pete Smith short in which one of the characters actually speaks. Una Merkel delivers one line, to which Smith replies, "Hey, I do all the talking around here!" And from then on, she's silent.
- GoofsWhen Mrs. Omsk knocks her mixing bowl off the kitchen table, it lands intact. Later when the narrator is "cleaning up" the kitchen for the chef, the bowl is now shattered.
Details
- Runtime10 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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