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Têtes de pioche

Original title: Block-Heads
  • 1938
  • Tous publics
  • 57m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
Têtes de pioche (1938)
ComedyFamilyWar

Stan, who has remained faithfully at his World War I post for twenty years, finally comes home where his best friend, Ollie, takes him in, thus allowing him to discover the many conveniences... Read allStan, who has remained faithfully at his World War I post for twenty years, finally comes home where his best friend, Ollie, takes him in, thus allowing him to discover the many conveniences of the modern world.Stan, who has remained faithfully at his World War I post for twenty years, finally comes home where his best friend, Ollie, takes him in, thus allowing him to discover the many conveniences of the modern world.

  • Director
    • John G. Blystone
  • Writers
    • Charley Rogers
    • Felix Adler
    • James Parrott
  • Stars
    • Stan Laurel
    • Oliver Hardy
    • Patricia Ellis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    4.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John G. Blystone
    • Writers
      • Charley Rogers
      • Felix Adler
      • James Parrott
    • Stars
      • Stan Laurel
      • Oliver Hardy
      • Patricia Ellis
    • 62User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos35

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    Top cast41

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    Stan Laurel
    Stan Laurel
    • Stan
    Oliver Hardy
    Oliver Hardy
    • Ollie
    Patricia Ellis
    Patricia Ellis
    • Mrs. Gilbert
    Minna Gombell
    Minna Gombell
    • Mrs. Hardy
    Billy Gilbert
    Billy Gilbert
    • Mr. Gilbert
    James Finlayson
    James Finlayson
    • Finn - Man on Stairs
    Zeffie Tilbury
    Zeffie Tilbury
    • Dowager Seated Near Stairs
    • (scenes deleted)
    Harry Anderson
    • Doorman
    • (uncredited)
    Walter Bacon
    • Pedestrian
    • (uncredited)
    Mike Behegan
    • Bugler
    • (uncredited)
    Billy Bletcher
    Billy Bletcher
    • Midget
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    William A. Boardway
    William A. Boardway
    • Tenant
    • (uncredited)
    Tommy Bond
    Tommy Bond
    • Neighbor's Son
    • (uncredited)
    Chet Brandenburg
    Chet Brandenburg
    • Pedestrian
    • (uncredited)
    Ed Brandenburg
    • Pedestrian
    • (uncredited)
    Russell Custer
    • Pedestrian
    • (uncredited)
    Tex Driscoll
    Tex Driscoll
    • Bearded Veteran
    • (uncredited)
    Olin Francis
    Olin Francis
    • Apartment House Tenant in 910
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • John G. Blystone
    • Writers
      • Charley Rogers
      • Felix Adler
      • James Parrott
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews62

    7.54.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8bkoganbing

    An Old Army Buddy

    Do you have the feeling that the folks in the army deliberately forgot to tell Stan that World War I was over? Maybe they just didn't want the troop ship to sink on the way back from France.

    If that was the case Ollie made the mistake of his life when he decided to invite his long lost buddy Stan over to meet the wife and have a good home cooked meal. Ollie's happily married now to Minna Gombell and when we first meet them he seems to be one happy well adjusted man.

    Blockheads really starts when Stan is reunited with Ollie at the old soldier's home. I guess a grateful government is giving Stan free room and board for being the last man discharged from World War I. Still there's nothing like home cooking.

    I think Blockheads offers us the proposition that Ollie can be a well adjusted if somewhat fatuous individual by himself. It's only apparently when he interacts with Stan that things just seem to happen.

    And in fact that's what Blockheads is, a series of gags from the time that Ollie meets Stan at the home and just assumes he's an amputee because he's decided to sit a wheelchair rigged up for one. Right up to the point where big game hunter Billy Gilbert, the Hardy's next door neighbor chases the both of them out of the house because he catches Mrs. Gilbert in Ollie's pajamas. How she got in them? You have to see Blockheads to find out.

    Best gag I thought was Stan dealing with an obnoxious neighbor who has just bullied Ollie into fetching the neighbor kid's football. Very priceless bit of comeuppance.

    To see how in the space of an hour Laurel manages to literally become a home wrecker, catch Blockheads.
    10Ron Oliver

    Mister Laurel & Mister Hardy Arrive In A State Of Confusion

    Two War buddies - BLOCK-HEADS both - create complete chaos in & around a fancy apartment building.

    Stan Laurel & Oliver Hardy are once again up to their usual high jinks, dealing with frightful wives, dangerous neighbors and the homicidal tendencies of nearly every inanimate object with which they come into contact. At this point in their partnership the Boys' were firmly established as screen legends; they worked together like well-oiled machinery, producing one laugh after another.

    Billy Gilbert & James Finlayson - the Boys' greatest nemesis - are on hand and in very fine form as Ollie's highly belligerent neighbors. Gilbert's Great White Hunter (`I don't bring ‘em back alive. I bring ‘em back dead. I come back alive.') is especially funny. Patricia Ellis as Mrs. Gilbert & Minna Gombell as Mrs. Hardy add to the merriment.

    Movie mavens will recognize OUR GANGer Tommy Bond as the mean kid with the football.

    The film's opening sequence, with newsreel footage of World War One battles, is unexpectedly grim for a comedy. Fortunately, the laughs start quickly. Best bit - Ollie, thinking Stan has lost his right leg, insists on carrying him everywhere. Stan lets him.
    7ccthemovieman-1

    Fans Of Stan & Ollie Should Like It

    This is the "boys" - Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy - it what many consider their last good comedy feature film, doing what they do best: short slapstick routines. It's almost a compilation of them, a series of routines more than a story with a plot. Stan and Ollie, between 45 and 50 years old when they made this film, were Hollywood veterans by now.

    Frankly, the comedy might be considered a little too corny for today's crowd but, hey, the movie is 70 years old. If you're a fan of these two comedians you should enjoy this film. Anyway, when anyone provides a lot of gags in just under one hour, you'll hit and miss a lot....but some things will always be funny. Some are still clever, too, such as the bit with the window shade being a shadow.

    You can always count on Ollie being henpecked and Stan being an airhead (he's a WWI soldier who marched in a trench for 20 years not realizing the war is long over). Of course, if you think about it, that premise has more holes in it than the proverbial swiss cheese, but who cares? A good portion of this film involves the simple fact of Ollie and Stan just trying to walk 13 flights up the stairs to Ollie's apartment, and the adventures that happen to them along the way.

    After watching just 57 minutes of these guys pratfalls and slapstick routines, you'll be exhausted!
    7Theo Robertson

    Possibly The Last Great L&H Picture

    BLOCK-HEADS is set up with an idea which must have seemed totally ridiculous in 1938 but when you stop to consider that Japanese soldiers were being found on remote Pacific islands 30 years after the second world war ended the idea stops being ridiculous and becomes shockingly prophetic

    This is possibly the last of the great L&H movies ( FLYING DUECES being the only other contender ) , after this the comedy duo started appearing in studio features that didn't seem to show much respect to their genius , made them slightly off centre and stretched stories out for almost 90 minutes when a 60 page script would have worked much better

    This means that BLOCK-HEADS suffers from the mild irritation of so many other Stan and Ollie star vehicles - It's rather episodic . But seeing as it's so funny what have we got to complain about ? Listen out for Stan's tagline " Is there gonna be a fight ? " which is repeated several times and the surreal sequence of closing the blinds on the stairway . Strange when people discuss the films of these two comedy gods they always think of slapstick but forget they were also masters of surrealist visualism too . The funniest moment is probably the final scene in Ollie's apartment involving the married couple from next door

    I still think THE LAUREL AND MURDER HARDY CASE is the best of their vehicles but BLOCK-HEADS deserves its own mention as being one of the very last superb Stan and Ollie comedies
    8JoeytheBrit

    Stan and Ollie just before things started going wrong.

    Relations with producer Hal Roach were strained when the boys made this short feature (or long short) and it wouldn't be long before they made the fateful decision to throw in their lot with 20th Century Fox, a move that would mark a slow, painful and irreversible decline. This is one of the last of the films that shows them almost consistently at the top of their game - although even here the cracks are beginning to show. When comedians start relying on re-working their own material from nearly a decade before - as Stan and Ollie do here in the final reel which is a virtual scene for scene remake of their first talkie Unaccustomed as We Are - you know something isn't right.

    This one's probably best remembered for the opening sequence which sees Stan still guarding his company's trench twenty years after the end of the Great War. It's a funny idea, and the boys get a huge amount of mileage out of it. When Ollie reads about his old friend's remarkable return from the dead he naturally wants to see him again. Big mistake. Within hours of meeting up again Stan has managed to bury Ollie's car in builder's sand, drive it into his garage door, blow up his kitchen, get him into a fight with James Finlayson and send his wife packing. Added to all the usual slapstick and pratfalls are some truly surreal moments such as when Stan pulls down the shadow blinds and when he smokes a pipe made out of his thumb. Definitely one of the boy's films that can be watched over and over again.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The first of four Laurel & Hardy features co-written by Harry Langdon, a comic superstar of the silent era who had fallen on hard times. The premise of the film - with Stan as a WWI veteran in France unaware that the war is over, and his readjustment to society - was adapted from Langdon's 1926 film Soldier Man (1926). Stan Laurel admired Langdon and used him as a gag writer for Les conscrits (1939), Les As d'Oxford (1940), and Laurel et Hardy en croisière (1940).
    • Goofs
      Ollie is pushing Stan in the wheelchair when Stan says that he's thirsty. Ollie picks up a hose pipe, gives it to Stan and goes to turn it on. Stan has the end of the hose pointing at Ollie resulting in him getting soaked. He turns the water off, returns to Stan, and he's dry.
    • Quotes

      Stan: What's a knick-knack?

      Oliver: Oh a knick-knack is a thing that sits on top of a whatnot.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits: The events and characters depicted in this photoplay are fictitious. Any similarity to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental, and not our fault! (signed Stan Laurel. Oliver Hardy)
    • Alternate versions
      In order to make it fit into a TV package in the 50s, it was edited down to a short and retitled "Do It Yourself."
    • Connections
      Featured in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's Big Parade of Hits for 1940 (1940)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 13, 1945 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Laurel et Hardy : Têtes de pioche
    • Filming locations
      • Hal Roach Studios - 8822 Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Hal Roach Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 57m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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