IMDb RATING
7.6/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
After testifying in court against a dangerous criminal, the boys plan to skip town, but the criminal escapes prison and comes after them.After testifying in court against a dangerous criminal, the boys plan to skip town, but the criminal escapes prison and comes after them.After testifying in court against a dangerous criminal, the boys plan to skip town, but the criminal escapes prison and comes after them.
Baldwin Cooke
- Court Official
- (uncredited)
Charles Dorety
- Man in Courtroom
- (uncredited)
Lester Dorr
- Man in Courtroom
- (uncredited)
Harry Dunkinson
- Judge
- (uncredited)
Fay Holderness
- Jury member
- (uncredited)
Fred Holmes
- Man in Courtroom
- (uncredited)
Jack 'Tiny' Lipson
- Jury member
- (uncredited)
Sam Lufkin
- Man with Warning
- (uncredited)
Murdock MacQuarrie
- Jury Foreman
- (uncredited)
William J. O'Brien
- Jury member
- (uncredited)
Ellinor Vanderveer
- Jury Member
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This is so very funny. Walter Long plays Butch, a murderer who Stan and Ollie have helped convicted. With that stern, ugly, threatening smirk, Butch tells them in court that he will escape, catch them, and tie their legs around their necks. He goes off to prison, but, of course, he escapes and the fun starts. The boys leave town but they need some financial aid and advertise for a travelling companion. It turns out to be Mae Bush, who is Butch's girlfriend. The arrive a her apartment shortly after Butch, who hides in a steamer trunk. The boys are take with Mae who is quite voluptuous in a 1930's kind of way. Butch realizes he can't get out of the trunk and much of the episode involves the duo trying to get him out, not realizing they are about to seal their fates. Tremendous character acting by Long and a really great plot.
If you're a Laurel and Hardy fan, you know that anything with Mae Busch is a howl. GOING BYE BYE is filled with gags and one liners, exceptionally directed by Charley Rogers. He may have just let he cameras roll and had the boys improvise their material, which was the key to their success.
Stan and Ollie's testimony have locked away tough guy Walter Long --for LIFE. Of course, Long declares somehow, someway he'll get out of prison and wrap their legs around their necks! The boys decide to get outta' town fast and advertise for a companion to pay expenses. Who else but Mae Busch --Long's gal pal? As can be expected, he crashes out of the big house and there's trouble ahead.
Lots of goofy stuff; Long is locked inside a trunk and the boys try to get him out --not knowing who he is. By the way, watch the room fall apart during an explosion. The production folks were very creative.
Interesting footnote, mentioned many times; Stan Laurel liked using Walter Long as a heavy, because --as he put it --he had no comedic ability. Best as a bad guy with NO smiles.
Mae Busch is a stylish dresser in this one, looking just fabulous.
This short is one of a handful that was colored for vhs back in the 1980s and 90s, but the old black and white prints have never lost their charm. Also remastered dvd and blu ray. Thanks to both METV and MOVIES Net for running these gems daily.
Stan and Ollie's testimony have locked away tough guy Walter Long --for LIFE. Of course, Long declares somehow, someway he'll get out of prison and wrap their legs around their necks! The boys decide to get outta' town fast and advertise for a companion to pay expenses. Who else but Mae Busch --Long's gal pal? As can be expected, he crashes out of the big house and there's trouble ahead.
Lots of goofy stuff; Long is locked inside a trunk and the boys try to get him out --not knowing who he is. By the way, watch the room fall apart during an explosion. The production folks were very creative.
Interesting footnote, mentioned many times; Stan Laurel liked using Walter Long as a heavy, because --as he put it --he had no comedic ability. Best as a bad guy with NO smiles.
Mae Busch is a stylish dresser in this one, looking just fabulous.
This short is one of a handful that was colored for vhs back in the 1980s and 90s, but the old black and white prints have never lost their charm. Also remastered dvd and blu ray. Thanks to both METV and MOVIES Net for running these gems daily.
Laurel and Hardy's testimony have helped convict Walter Long. He announces that he's going to bust out of prison and kill them. They prepare to leave town, but don't have enough money. They advertise in the paper and Mae Busch answers. If that's not enough trouble, she's Long's girlfriend. If that's not enough trouble, he's escaped and coming along with them. However, he's locked in a trunk. Always ineptly helpful, the Boy's try to get him out.
This is the short with the immortal line, "I have milk in my ear." Filled with ridiculous details, this is one of Stan and Ollie's best short..... which can be said of an astonishing number of them.
This is the short with the immortal line, "I have milk in my ear." Filled with ridiculous details, this is one of Stan and Ollie's best short..... which can be said of an astonishing number of them.
The critic in me says that the entire film is structured for the sole purpose of the sight gag with which the film ends. But, OH, WHAT A SIGHT GAG!
I saw this the other night at a local arts club screening, but available nowhere else. Why isn't this (or for matter, their masterpiece "The Music Box") on video?
I saw this the other night at a local arts club screening, but available nowhere else. Why isn't this (or for matter, their masterpiece "The Music Box") on video?
"Going Bye-Bye !" shows the screen's greatest comic double-act in brilliant form. It is in fact their last short comedy film classic - another five more two-reelers followed followed (though only one of these - "Them Thar Hills" - approaches the standard of this one). Long is at his fearsome best, and the dialogue ("Excuse me, I have milk in my ear"), characterisations and slapstick are wonderful. This is up there with Stan and Ollie's best. A must.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Ollie brings a bunch of flowers to Mae's apartment, they then change hands 16 times and are never set down or discarded, even at the end of the film.
- GoofsThe trunk is set on fire and flips around in the air, then lands upside down. But in the very next shot, it is shown right-side up.
- Alternate versionsWhen released on video with Video Treasures, the following scene was removed: When Ollie accidentally get's his head stuck in the head of the bed Stan helps him pull it out. The video release showed the Before and After of the gag instead of the middle, so it cuts right to the broken bed head and Ollie rubbing his neck.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Crazy World of Laurel and Hardy (1966)
Details
- Runtime
- 21m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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