The gang decides to build their own fire engine.The gang decides to build their own fire engine.The gang decides to build their own fire engine.
Wally Albright
- Wally
- (as Our Gang)
Matthew 'Stymie' Beard
- Stymie
- (as Our Gang)
Scotty Beckett
- Scotty
- (as Our Gang)
Tommy Bond
- Tommy
- (as Our Gang)
George 'Spanky' McFarland
- Spanky
- (as Our Gang)
Bobbie 'Cotton' Beard
- Cotton
- (as Our Gang)
Tommy Bupp
- Our Gang Member
- (as Our Gang)
Donald Proffitt
- Our Gang Member
- (as Our Gang)
Marvin Strin
- Bubbles
- (as Our Gang)
Jacqueline Taylor
- Jane
- (as Our Gang)
Jerry Tucker
- Jerry - Rich Kid
- (as Our Gang)
Pete the Dog
- Pete
- (as Our Gang)
Ernie Alexander
- Pedestrian
- (uncredited)
Jean Aulbach
- Little Sister
- (uncredited)
Harry Bernard
- Man Watering Lawn
- (uncredited)
Charlie Hall
- Window Washer
- (uncredited)
Tony Kales
- Our Gang Member
- (unconfirmed)
- (uncredited)
Tiny Sandford
- Moving Man
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
10xidax
This is the funniest, most thrilling OUR GANG I've ever seen. If I could wish for one picture in the series to be named to the National Film Registry or to survive the Apocalypse or what have you, it would probably be this one. I wouldn't say it's the best - the Rascals made too many different kinds of film for any one to be the best - but it embodies what made the series great.
One of those great things is Spanky McFarland. In some of his early shorts his grumpiness is a little overdone, but here he's just perfect. I doubt any of the children have ever been cuter.
One of those great things is Spanky McFarland. In some of his early shorts his grumpiness is a little overdone, but here he's just perfect. I doubt any of the children have ever been cuter.
An OUR GANG Comedy Short.
Although the Gang tries to be friendly with a snooty new rich kid - `HI-NEIGHBOR!' - it's obvious he disdains them all. And when his spiffy fire engine impresses Jane, it's time for the Rascals to build their own competition vehicle.
Some good laughs here. The building of the contraption, especially Spanky helping Stymie put on the wheels, is hilarious. Highlight: the race down the very steep hill.
Although the Gang tries to be friendly with a snooty new rich kid - `HI-NEIGHBOR!' - it's obvious he disdains them all. And when his spiffy fire engine impresses Jane, it's time for the Rascals to build their own competition vehicle.
Some good laughs here. The building of the contraption, especially Spanky helping Stymie put on the wheels, is hilarious. Highlight: the race down the very steep hill.
In this episode the rascals build a fire engine from scratch, to use in a race.
The brake on the home-made fire engine fails at the end and the fire engine ends up in a pond. In one scene a boy is sitting on a board and someone drills through the board, ripping off the boy's pants and, I think, his underpants (!)
An unusual episode because before the rascals also get their clothes torn off by shrubs on the side of the road as they ride down to the pond-- where they all get dunked.
The brake on the home-made fire engine fails at the end and the fire engine ends up in a pond. In one scene a boy is sitting on a board and someone drills through the board, ripping off the boy's pants and, I think, his underpants (!)
An unusual episode because before the rascals also get their clothes torn off by shrubs on the side of the road as they ride down to the pond-- where they all get dunked.
Between the wars, and in spite of the depression, America remained in two halves. Today, those are red and blue states, but in the 30s it was rural America and the cities. During this time, the cities got bigger and the farm areas somewhat thinner but more resolute. You were either in one or the other, period.
There were essentially no suburbs, what we would think of today as suburbs. Except in Southern California. Suburbs were invented after the second war with Levittown and the huge incentive of veteran's mortgages. Only then would they become something fully recognized in the film consciousness as physically representing the middle class melting pot.
That's why it is so noticeable here. The gang lives in a suburb where rich, poor, back and white coexist.
Now think about that a moment. I'm pretty sure that Roach had no special agenda. This suburb was outside Los Angeles and handy for filming. But the notion of a gang that transcends class (but not in this episode) and race, and even sex mostly is pretty darn commendable. And I suppose in the long run it was as influential as all the other stuff that gets Spike Lee riled.
This one has a familiar theme for the Gang shorts: class is bad, women are fickle and attracted to cash, cooperation and imagination trumps all.
Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
There were essentially no suburbs, what we would think of today as suburbs. Except in Southern California. Suburbs were invented after the second war with Levittown and the huge incentive of veteran's mortgages. Only then would they become something fully recognized in the film consciousness as physically representing the middle class melting pot.
That's why it is so noticeable here. The gang lives in a suburb where rich, poor, back and white coexist.
Now think about that a moment. I'm pretty sure that Roach had no special agenda. This suburb was outside Los Angeles and handy for filming. But the notion of a gang that transcends class (but not in this episode) and race, and even sex mostly is pretty darn commendable. And I suppose in the long run it was as influential as all the other stuff that gets Spike Lee riled.
This one has a familiar theme for the Gang shorts: class is bad, women are fickle and attracted to cash, cooperation and imagination trumps all.
Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
8tavm
This Hal Roach comedy short, Hi'-Neighbor!, is the one hundred twenty-sixth in the "Our Gang/Little Rascals" series and the thirty-eighth talkie. Wally and the gang see a new toy fire engine arriving in town and attempt to make friends with the rich kid who owns it but he wants nothing to do with them. Also the girl Wally has a crush on, Jane, takes a ride in that fire engine so he and the rest of the gang try to make their own...This is one of the most enjoyable of the talkie Our Gang comedies as we see the gang use their imagination in building something out of discarded parts because of their desire to one-up on someone higher up the social ladder, so to speak! So that's definitely a recommendation of Hi'-Neighbor! P.S. Four months had passed after the previous OG short-Wild Poses-had finished filming. Spanky had been loaned to various studios during this time and in one of those features he made for them-Miss Fane's Baby Is Stolen for Paramount-he caught a whooping cough and passed it on to co-star Baby LeRoy! As punishment, Spank had been suspended, hence the gap. During that gap, director Robert F. McGowan had decided to quit the series. He was replaced by Gus Meins who would subsequently helm the series for the next two years. Newcomers to the gang included Wally Albright, Jackie Lynn Taylor who played Jane here, and Scotty Beckett who would be paired with Spanky. The rich kid is played by Jerry Tucker whose real last name is Schatz. When this short appeared on Disc 4 of "The Little Rascals-The Complete Collection" DVD set, his elderly self appeared in the intro of that one as he considered this one his most enjoyable film experience with the gang. He's one of the few members still alive today.
Did you know
- TriviaScotty Beckett's debut as an "Our Gang" member.
- GoofsWhen Wally steps out from the water puddle, he takes one step and then stops. The shot then cuts to Spanky, who is sitting next to Wally. When the shot cuts to Spanky, to the right you can see Wally take the one step again.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Our Gang Story (1994)
Details
- Runtime17 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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