Laurel and Hardy's first feature may suffers from a lack of structure
and an unnecessarily rambling plot but it still manages to raise a
smile, thanks to the innate ability of cinema's best loved duo to
transform the most mundane comic situation into a side-splittingly
funny routine. The film was intended as a short but evolved into
a feature once producer Hal Roach realised that he had enough material
for a full-length film. The preview audience was unimpressed with
the first cut and so various changes were made - scenes cut, new scenes
added - which made it more watchable.
Pardon Us barely qualifies as
a Laurel and Hardy classic. It is plodding, overlong, poorly
structured and short on good jokes - but it has one or two magical
moments. Ollie's soulful rendition of Lazy Moon is the film's main
delight, making palatable a sequence that would otherwise be considered
deeply offensive by today's politically correct standards. The
comic high point comes when the boys try to put out a fire (a scene
only recently restored to the film), treating us to the
kind of inspired laugh-out-loud slapstick for which L&H are
renowned.
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
It is the age of prohibition, a time when jobs are scarce and alcohol
scarcer still. Stan and Ollie hit upon the bright idea of brewing
their own beer but then make the mistake of selling their produce to a
police officer. In no time at all, they find themselves in
prison, sharing a cell with a hardened convict named The Tiger.
Normally, The Tiger would have taken great pleasure making mincemeat of
his cellmates, but Stan wins his respect when he makes a raspberry
sound through his loose tooth. Having gained The Tiger's
confidence, the boys become hapless participants in a prison
break-out. On the run from the authorities, Stan and Ollie hide
out on a cotton plantation where they disguise themselves as negro
workers. Their new-found freedom will prove to be short-lived...
Cast:Stan Laurel (Mr. Stanley Laurel),
Oliver Hardy (Oliver Norval Hardy),
June Marlowe (Warden's Daughter),
Wilfred Lucas (Warden),
James Finlayson (Schoolteacher),
Walter Long (The Tiger),
Tiny Sandford (Shields - Prison Guard),
Frank Austin (Prisoner with Sore Tooth),
Charles A. Bachman (Insurgent Convict),
Eddie Baker (Plantation Boss),
Belle (Bloodhound),
Harry Bernard (Desk Sergeant),
Bobby Burns (Dental Patient),
Baldwin Cooke (Insurgent Convict),
Charles Dorety (Insurgent Convict),
Gordon Douglas (Typist),
Bobby Dunn (Insurgent Convict),
Eddie Dunn (Insurgent Convict),
The Etude Ethiopian Chorus (Cotton Pickers),
Otto Fries (Dentist)
Country: USA
Language: English
Support: Black and White
Runtime: 56 min
The very best fantasy films in French cinema
Whilst the horror genre is under-represented in French cinema, there are still a fair number of weird and wonderful forays into the realms of fantasy.
From its birth in 1895, cinema has been an essential part of French culture. Now it is one of the most dynamic, versatile and important of the arts in France.