Three confidence tricksters don the guise of Indians to avoid a jail sentence. Their plan works until one of them, dressed as a squaw, is forced to marry a local tough guy.Three confidence tricksters don the guise of Indians to avoid a jail sentence. Their plan works until one of them, dressed as a squaw, is forced to marry a local tough guy.Three confidence tricksters don the guise of Indians to avoid a jail sentence. Their plan works until one of them, dressed as a squaw, is forced to marry a local tough guy.
Moe Howard
- Moe
- (as Moe)
Larry Fine
- Larry
- (as Larry)
Curly Howard
- Curly
- (as Curly)
Gail Arnold
- Saloon Girl
- (uncredited)
Beatrice Blinn
- Saloon Girl
- (uncredited)
Lew Davis
- Saloon Patron
- (uncredited)
Al Ferguson
- Saloon Patron
- (uncredited)
William Irving
- Bartender
- (uncredited)
Bud Jamison
- Pierre
- (uncredited)
Eddie Laughton
- Saloon Patron
- (uncredited)
Sam Lufkin
- Saloon Patron
- (uncredited)
Robert McKenzie
- Sheriff T. E. Higgins
- (uncredited)
John Rand
- Saloon Patron
- (uncredited)
Al Thompson
- Deputy Sheriff
- (uncredited)
Hilda Title
- Little Blonde in Saloon
- (uncredited)
Elaine Waters
- Saloon Girl
- (uncredited)
Blackie Whiteford
- Saloon Patron
- (uncredited)
Bert Young
- Saloon Patron
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is another Stooges short with a Western setting, which has some nice backwoods scenery but is otherwise routine. Here, the boys are swindlers run out of town by the customers of a saloon; they subsequently have to fend for themselves, where we get a good gag which has Curly trying to procure food by going underwater and shooting at the fish! Eventually, they reach a log-cabin the property of one of their 'victims' and whose wife has been abducted by Indians; coincidentally, The Stooges disguise themselves as Native Americans which, of course, incurs the trapper's wrath (and also gives the film its title!). At the finale, our heroes are back in town believing their Indian disguise will fool the locals but, on the run once again soon after, they unwittingly lock themselves up in jail!
Larry, Moe, and Curly are petty crooks in Lobo City in the old west. They go on the run as fugitives from the law. They have a $333.33 bounty wanted "Dead or in Bad Shape". They go fishing and then get pursued by lawmen. The guys break into a cabin and pretend to be Indians. When the real cabin owner shows up, he is angry. His wife had ran away with an Indian. The boys escape and continue with their Indian disguise. A cross-dressing Curly gets married.
This certainly wouldn't fly today. Times have changed. It's not the most inappropriate, but it is still funny. This is early official "The Three Stooges" directed by Del Lord. I actually find the fishing the most fun. It is simple Stooges comedy and I like its simplicity. I also like a cross-dressing Curly. Cross-dressing is always fun. I truly love a bald Curly trying to be demure.
This certainly wouldn't fly today. Times have changed. It's not the most inappropriate, but it is still funny. This is early official "The Three Stooges" directed by Del Lord. I actually find the fishing the most fun. It is simple Stooges comedy and I like its simplicity. I also like a cross-dressing Curly. Cross-dressing is always fun. I truly love a bald Curly trying to be demure.
"Whoops, I'm an Indian!" is not one of the better Three Stooges shorts, though it is one that features some LGBTQ content!
The story is set in the Yukon during the Canadian Gold Rush. The trio have set up a gambling business but are soon caught cheating. They are now wanted men so they disguise themselves as natives. The problem is that a nasty character thinks Curly is an Indian maiden and not only does he court Curly but marries him as well!
This is a strange short....not bad but really weird. Curly certainly didn't look like an Indian maiden to me but to each his own. I wish them the best.
The story is set in the Yukon during the Canadian Gold Rush. The trio have set up a gambling business but are soon caught cheating. They are now wanted men so they disguise themselves as natives. The problem is that a nasty character thinks Curly is an Indian maiden and not only does he court Curly but marries him as well!
This is a strange short....not bad but really weird. Curly certainly didn't look like an Indian maiden to me but to each his own. I wish them the best.
Whoops I'm an Indian (1936)
** (out of 4)
Lazy short from The Three Stooges has them wanted by the law so they dress as Indians but then run into a man whose wife left him for one. The jokes here are pretty standard and routine and there really weren't any laugh at loud moments. The fishing scene is probably the highlight but even this wasn't that funny.
Now available on Columbia's 2-disc set, which features over 20 shorts, all digitally remastered and looking better than ever. If you're a fan of the Stooges then this is a must own.
** (out of 4)
Lazy short from The Three Stooges has them wanted by the law so they dress as Indians but then run into a man whose wife left him for one. The jokes here are pretty standard and routine and there really weren't any laugh at loud moments. The fishing scene is probably the highlight but even this wasn't that funny.
Now available on Columbia's 2-disc set, which features over 20 shorts, all digitally remastered and looking better than ever. If you're a fan of the Stooges then this is a must own.
In the episode, Curly says he belongs to Chief Vanderpuss, although the closed captioning says Chief Ratapuss, and Moe says he belongs to Chief Afuntagribbinis~ that's how the closed captioning spells it. I am unable to find out anything about Afunta Gribbinis or Afuntagribbinis. What am I missing? Or what is he really saying? In the episode, Curly says he belongs to Chief Vanderpuss, although the closed captioning says Chief Ratapuss, and Moe says he belongs to Chief Afuntagribbinis~ that's how the closed captioning spells it. I am unable to find out anything about Afunta Gribbinis or Afuntagribbinis. What am I missing? Or what is he really saying?
Did you know
- TriviaThe title is a reference to the popular Fanny Brice song, "I'm an Indian" ("Hoo-hoo, I'm an Indian.").
- GoofsAcross the water a road with utility poles is visible.
- ConnectionsEdited into Back to the Woods (1937)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Frontier Daze
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime17 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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