IMDb RATING
7.0/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Laurel and Hardy patrol the streets as the city's newest cops. This can't possibly end well--except for the criminals who can now safely commit crime.Laurel and Hardy patrol the streets as the city's newest cops. This can't possibly end well--except for the criminals who can now safely commit crime.Laurel and Hardy patrol the streets as the city's newest cops. This can't possibly end well--except for the criminals who can now safely commit crime.
Harry Bernard
- Jail Visitor
- (uncredited)
Billy Bletcher
- Radio Dispatcher
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Frank Brownlee
- Police Chief Ramsbottom
- (uncredited)
Al Corporal
- Butler
- (uncredited)
Edgar Dearing
- Policeman
- (uncredited)
Eddie Dunn
- Police Sergeant
- (uncredited)
Charlie Hall
- Tire Thief's Partner
- (uncredited)
Bob Kortman
- Tire Thief
- (uncredited)
James C. Morton
- Policeman
- (uncredited)
Tiny Sandford
- Policeman
- (uncredited)
Frank Terry
- Safecracker
- (uncredited)
Featured review
After decades of watching this classic, I still can't figure out what the chief of police is doing with a "barrel" of sauerkraut in his basement --which Laurel and Hardy promptly fall into!
This short is OUTRAGEOUS, and has some history behind it. Here, the boys are rookie cops who answer a variety of calls on their first night. This comedy is peppered with some of the best stock players who worked with Laurel and Hardy, including Tiny Sanford and James Morton as cops and Charlie Hall as a guy who tries to steal the rear tire off the boy's police car! Stan Laurel made it a point to include actors who appeared with him back on the London stage.
Case in point is Frank Terry, who plays the wily safecracker who argues with Stan as which day is best for "him" to appear in court? In case you didn't know, the man with the deep, deep voice on the police radio is Frank Brownlee. Brownlee became famous --or at least his voice did --when he auditioned and won parts in Walt Disney cartoons. He moved to Warner Brothers and did many voices for Bugs Bunny cartoons and the like, however.... he NEVER got credit because there was a clause in Mel Blanc's contract to only give HIM credit. Lloyd French directed this short who also went to Warner Brothers and headed hundreds of popular big band musical and comedy shorts.
Get the Laurel and Hardy dvd short subject box set. Some have been produced in the UK, so beware as they will not play on American made dvd players. Check the details.
This short is OUTRAGEOUS, and has some history behind it. Here, the boys are rookie cops who answer a variety of calls on their first night. This comedy is peppered with some of the best stock players who worked with Laurel and Hardy, including Tiny Sanford and James Morton as cops and Charlie Hall as a guy who tries to steal the rear tire off the boy's police car! Stan Laurel made it a point to include actors who appeared with him back on the London stage.
Case in point is Frank Terry, who plays the wily safecracker who argues with Stan as which day is best for "him" to appear in court? In case you didn't know, the man with the deep, deep voice on the police radio is Frank Brownlee. Brownlee became famous --or at least his voice did --when he auditioned and won parts in Walt Disney cartoons. He moved to Warner Brothers and did many voices for Bugs Bunny cartoons and the like, however.... he NEVER got credit because there was a clause in Mel Blanc's contract to only give HIM credit. Lloyd French directed this short who also went to Warner Brothers and headed hundreds of popular big band musical and comedy shorts.
Get the Laurel and Hardy dvd short subject box set. Some have been produced in the UK, so beware as they will not play on American made dvd players. Check the details.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe title sequence of this short is filmed to look like a police car racing West at night on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, with siren blaring, and a windshield wiper 'erasing' each set of credits and 'sweeping in' the next. Along the route, mostly on the left (South) side of Wilshire, we see a Cut Rate drug store; a billboard (or perhaps a building logo) for Mullen & Bluett clothiers; a billboard ad for R&H Pilsner Beer. An apparent 'jump cut' puts us a few blocks farther West on Wilshire, where, again on the left, we see a movie theatre marquee (probably the Fox Ritz at 5214 Wilshire); a large, billboard-sized Coca-Cola sign in lights on the right; and in the distance, on the left, a rooftop lighted sign on the Myer Siegel building at 5410 Wilshire.
- GoofsStan and Ollie argue about their last day off, but at the end of the film they claim it's their first day on the job.
- Quotes
Car Dispatcher: Calling Car Thirteen.
Oliver: That's us.
Car Dispatcher: Calling Car One-Three.
Stanley: I thought he said Thirteen.
Oliver: Shut up.
Car Dispatcher: Look out, boys, somebody's stealing your spare tire. That is all.
- Alternate versionsThere is also a colorized version.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Calling All Cars
- Filming locations
- Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, USA(opening credits, beginning of which became known as "The Miracle Mile")
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime20 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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