IMDb RATING
6.2/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Stan and Ollie get involved with con men, crooks, a genial magician, and two interchangeable coffins with disastrous but funny results.Stan and Ollie get involved with con men, crooks, a genial magician, and two interchangeable coffins with disastrous but funny results.Stan and Ollie get involved with con men, crooks, a genial magician, and two interchangeable coffins with disastrous but funny results.
Stan Laurel
- Stan
- (as Laurel)
Oliver Hardy
- Ollie
- (as Hardy)
Dante
- Dante the Magician
- (as Dante the Magician)
Harry Blackstone
- Magician
- (uncredited)
Wade Boteler
- Police Announcer
- (uncredited)
Buz Buckley
- Dante's Young Admirer
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
One's the first picture that I'd ever seen at theatre was from this outstanding couple, which I didn't remember the name, well-known here in Brazil fondly as "the Fat and the Thin" in this picture our friends are hired to takes a coffin to another city by train, the coffin was swapped on railway station, actually inside has a living crook who is at large from the police.
Forgetting a bit the plot, there are some many gags around, they were misled by a couple of crooks who sold to them a machine that make oversized money, so they made a spensive dinner, but the machine didn't work out, more trouble ahead, arriving in the town they got a job with a great magician, but they are pursued by the coffin's gang.
These remarkable duo comics had a successful box-office here and TV as well, their DVD are available with an original dubbed version, all in my collection !!!
Resume:
First watch: 1991 / How many: 4 / Source: TV-DVD / Rating: 7.
Forgetting a bit the plot, there are some many gags around, they were misled by a couple of crooks who sold to them a machine that make oversized money, so they made a spensive dinner, but the machine didn't work out, more trouble ahead, arriving in the town they got a job with a great magician, but they are pursued by the coffin's gang.
These remarkable duo comics had a successful box-office here and TV as well, their DVD are available with an original dubbed version, all in my collection !!!
Resume:
First watch: 1991 / How many: 4 / Source: TV-DVD / Rating: 7.
This is one of laurel and hardy's most underappreciated films. The scene where Stan climbs a rope in a magic trick is one of the funniest things i have ever seen. There are some great lines too - "Let's go to Florida. I'm dying for an orange". Priceless.
Laurel and Hardy had been stars for years with Hal Roach Studios. However, by the 1940s, they were considerably older and their contract had expired. Their decision to try out other studios (RKO, MGM and FOX) resulted in a string of, at best, lackluster films. Sure, they made better money, but none of these films comes close to classic status.
As for A-HAUNTING WE WILL GO, it was one of these 1940s films, but at least it wasn't bad--just, unfortunately, made by a studio that had no appreciation for the team at all. The biggest problem about this film is that Stan and Ollie play roles that could have been filled by practically anyone. The usual banter and style you'd expect in a Laurel and Hardy film is strangely absent--something that plagued all their post-Roach productions.
The plot for A-HAUNTING WE WILL GO was quite unexpected. With a title like this, I would have expected a movie about a haunted house or ghosts but these were strangely absent from the film. Instead, it's about Stan and Ollie stumbling into a gang of criminals as well as bumbling into becoming assistants to a magician.
Fortunately, despite being a very odd and unfamiliar style, the script wasn't bad at all--but unfortunately it wasn't all that funny either. While there were a few mildly funny moments, they were all centered around camera tricks and had nothing to do with the boys themselves. It was if funny things were thrown at them instead of allowing them to just be themselves and express their own gentle form of humor. Still, not a bad film--but far from classic Laurel and Hardy. Worth a look for fans of the team and not particularly offensive or daring.
As for A-HAUNTING WE WILL GO, it was one of these 1940s films, but at least it wasn't bad--just, unfortunately, made by a studio that had no appreciation for the team at all. The biggest problem about this film is that Stan and Ollie play roles that could have been filled by practically anyone. The usual banter and style you'd expect in a Laurel and Hardy film is strangely absent--something that plagued all their post-Roach productions.
The plot for A-HAUNTING WE WILL GO was quite unexpected. With a title like this, I would have expected a movie about a haunted house or ghosts but these were strangely absent from the film. Instead, it's about Stan and Ollie stumbling into a gang of criminals as well as bumbling into becoming assistants to a magician.
Fortunately, despite being a very odd and unfamiliar style, the script wasn't bad at all--but unfortunately it wasn't all that funny either. While there were a few mildly funny moments, they were all centered around camera tricks and had nothing to do with the boys themselves. It was if funny things were thrown at them instead of allowing them to just be themselves and express their own gentle form of humor. Still, not a bad film--but far from classic Laurel and Hardy. Worth a look for fans of the team and not particularly offensive or daring.
First things first - this is not a "horror-comedy" as I presumed it would be by the title. I mean, even the opening credits have the name of the film in ghoulish lettering along with the spooky image of a ghost leering down at Stan and Ollie, for crying out loud! But getting past that -- this is one of those oft-despised latter day "Fox films" that the aging team of Laurel and Hardy made after their greatest works at Hal Roach Studios. It's not as "heinous" as most critics make it out to be, but it's not one of their better forties movies either. In this one, the "boys" get released from a stay in jail and are told to leave town. So they meet up with a group of swindling crooks (one of them is played by a very young Elisha Cook Jr.) who need their help in traveling to Dayton, Ohio. The dopey plot is all over the place, but along the way there are some small chuckles to be had (the hitchhiking fiasco, the "Inflato" machine duping) and a few mildly cute slapstick gags. But things sink as the film goes on and "Dante the Magician" takes up too much screen time (he's even top billed along with Laurel and Hardy!) ** out of ****
10 Stars.
I have to tell you something. Laurel and Hardy's later films WERE good comedies. Lots of critics have given them a thumbs down. These films made millions of dollars for Fox (notice how critics don't mention that!) and had a following. They have survived the test of time and, in fact, were the first to be released to television.
A HAUNTING WE WILL GO was the team's second film for Fox, designed to keep up with the antics of Abbott and Costello (who had released HOLD THAT GHOST!). They had a bigger budget and a solid cast of character actors, including world famous Dante, the Magician in this episode. There's some debate this may have been a re-worked script, originally planned for CHARLIE CHAN. The series was cancelled by Fox earlier in the year, and producers put all their attention to Laurel and Hardy. It makes sense.
Here you have a coffin, a missing corpse and a bunch of sly crooks. Sounds like something Charlie Chan would have gotten himself into. Additionally, some genuinely classic scenes have the boys assisting Dante, the magician with his act. Alfred Werker directed these bits beautifully, and with a few special effects. The setting is also very elaborate, boasting a large cast of extras in the audience.
After watching this comedy for decades, and for some reason, always on a Sunday afternoon, it's still a treat, particularly the whodunit to WHO ending. Lois Laurel, Stan's daughter, claimed these films were fun, and, in fact, Oliver Hardy was said to have enjoyed making them. His favorite was JITTERBUGS, released soon after this production.
Goofy dialogue and one-liners tossed in, written by Lou Breslow, who also wrote the original story. The phony money machine bit with bug-eyed waiter Mantan Moreland is a gem.
Look for the (censured) backward statue. Ollie's double-take is hilarious. Note the cartoon characters at the start of the film credits, which showed the art department really loved their work. Yes, there are many publicity photos of the boys in costume, still in circulation to this day. Some of the photos have been restored in color and they look great.
In box sets of three films each, released by Cinema Classics, 2006.
I have to tell you something. Laurel and Hardy's later films WERE good comedies. Lots of critics have given them a thumbs down. These films made millions of dollars for Fox (notice how critics don't mention that!) and had a following. They have survived the test of time and, in fact, were the first to be released to television.
A HAUNTING WE WILL GO was the team's second film for Fox, designed to keep up with the antics of Abbott and Costello (who had released HOLD THAT GHOST!). They had a bigger budget and a solid cast of character actors, including world famous Dante, the Magician in this episode. There's some debate this may have been a re-worked script, originally planned for CHARLIE CHAN. The series was cancelled by Fox earlier in the year, and producers put all their attention to Laurel and Hardy. It makes sense.
Here you have a coffin, a missing corpse and a bunch of sly crooks. Sounds like something Charlie Chan would have gotten himself into. Additionally, some genuinely classic scenes have the boys assisting Dante, the magician with his act. Alfred Werker directed these bits beautifully, and with a few special effects. The setting is also very elaborate, boasting a large cast of extras in the audience.
After watching this comedy for decades, and for some reason, always on a Sunday afternoon, it's still a treat, particularly the whodunit to WHO ending. Lois Laurel, Stan's daughter, claimed these films were fun, and, in fact, Oliver Hardy was said to have enjoyed making them. His favorite was JITTERBUGS, released soon after this production.
Goofy dialogue and one-liners tossed in, written by Lou Breslow, who also wrote the original story. The phony money machine bit with bug-eyed waiter Mantan Moreland is a gem.
Look for the (censured) backward statue. Ollie's double-take is hilarious. Note the cartoon characters at the start of the film credits, which showed the art department really loved their work. Yes, there are many publicity photos of the boys in costume, still in circulation to this day. Some of the photos have been restored in color and they look great.
In box sets of three films each, released by Cinema Classics, 2006.
Did you know
- TriviaThe town of Milledgeville is mentioned. There is no Milledgeville in California, but there is in Oliver Hardy's home state of Georgia. Hardy sometimes referred to place names near his home in his films as an "in-joke,"
- Quotes
Oliver Hardy: [to Stan] It's better to spend one night with a corpse than 60 days with the cops.
- ConnectionsFeatured in L'univers du rire (1982)
- How long is A-Haunting We Will Go?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- A-Haunting We Will Go
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 7 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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