The stooges are cheated into trading their restaurant for Thunderbolt, a washed-up race horse, and enter the horse racing industry. When Curly feeds Thunderbolt some chili pepperinos, he run... Read allThe stooges are cheated into trading their restaurant for Thunderbolt, a washed-up race horse, and enter the horse racing industry. When Curly feeds Thunderbolt some chili pepperinos, he runs like crazy towards the nearest water trough. The boys quickly discover Thunderbolt's sud... Read allThe stooges are cheated into trading their restaurant for Thunderbolt, a washed-up race horse, and enter the horse racing industry. When Curly feeds Thunderbolt some chili pepperinos, he runs like crazy towards the nearest water trough. The boys quickly discover Thunderbolt's sudden burst of speed and enter Thunderbolt in a big race. With jockey Larry feeding Thunderb... Read all
- Curly
- (as Curly)
- Larry
- (as Larry)
- Moe
- (as Moe)
- Racetrack Announcer
- (uncredited)
- Con Man
- (uncredited)
- Stunned Pepperino Eater
- (uncredited)
- Customer ordering Veal
- (uncredited)
- Higgins
- (uncredited)
- Cafe Customer
- (uncredited)
- Race Starter
- (uncredited)
- Butler
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This is one of My favorite Three Stooges shorts with Curly! All Appearing in this short are Billy Bletcher, Nick Copeland, Lew Davis, Charles Dorety, William Irving, and Jack 'Tiny' Lipson! This one is so hilarious! Curly has a great performance here and in My opinion its one of his best. I strongly recommend this Three Stooges short!
Veteran director Charles Lamont took the reins on "Playing the Ponies." Lamont, who broke into film in 1923 working for Mack Sennett, handled most of Buster Keaton's short films at Educational Pictures before moving over to Columbia Pictures. Lamont directed only two Stooges' films, this and 1935's "Restless Knights" before he realized "I had an intense hatred for Columbia's president Harry Cohn," and eventually joined Universal Pictures. He directed the later pictures of Abbott and Costello as well as the Ma and Pa Kettles series.
** 1/2 (out of 4)
The Stooges are running a junky restaurant where no client leaves happy or willing to tell their friends to visit. The boys overhear a couple con men talking about a horse and end up trading their restaurant for him. It turns out the horse is a total bust until Curly ends up feeding him some hot peppers. This here is certainly middle ground as far as the Stooges go but there are a few nice laugh scattered throughout the film. This certainly isn't a short I'd be going back to watch over and over again but there's enough here for at least one viewing. I found the first half with the restaurant to be the best as we get Curly doing several nice gags including the fishing bit as well as him constantly eating the salted peanuts. The customers in the film also get to deliver some nice lines as all of them leave the restaurant very unhappy about their "mud like" coffee and various other issues. The scene with the horse and feeding it hot peppers really didn't make me laugh even though it was mildly cute.
Yes, it's nuts.
The Stooges have a decision to make. Continue running their restaurant (called the Flounder Inn) which sells lousy food? -- OR trade it for Thunderbolt(?) a winning racehorse? A couple of crooks dupe Moe, Larry and Curly into giving up their business, and now they're stuck with an old, worn down racehorse.
But wait, there's more! Curly happens to feed Thunderbolt a bunch of chili pepperinos (aka REAL HOT PEPPERS) and the horse goes nuts! Thunderbolt has to bolt to the nearest bucket of water to coooool off! Comes the idea; why not enter him in a race with lots of water waiting for him at the finish line? Crazy on steroids idea, and riding Thunderbolt to victory is noneother than Larry! Finally, Larry comes off as a hero, deserving a little recognition every now and then.
A gotsta' see from start to the finishline, written to max by Elwood Ullman, who later wrote several films for the BOWERY BOYS.
This was director Charles Lamont's second and last film with the Stooges, who moved to Universal Pictures and had his greatest success with ABBOTT AND COSTELLO.
Some familiar faces; silent screen comedian Charles Dorety in the background, also 6 foot 4 Jack "Tiny" Lipson, who appeared in scores of films, showing off his height. Listen for the voice of Billy Bletcher, unseen as the racetrack announcer. Billy became a star voicing (now legendary) cartoon characters for Walt Disney.
This film short was remastered and colorized by Columbia. Always on dvd, generally by decades, 30s, 40s and 50s episodes. Thanks always to METV for running these golden oldies Saturdays.
Did you know
- TriviaNick Copeland and Lew Davis reprise their roles from Cash and Carry (1937) as the two con men who once again swindle the Stooges.
- GoofsWhen the customer eats the pepperinos and is furiously drinking a pint of water, you can see a hose draining the water down to his elbow.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime15 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1