“Watch these lad, they’re dead funny!”
Jim Joyce, Retired Railway Carpenter, circa 1970
Of course, it’s sobering to me now to realise I am far
more distanced in time from the young boy about to take his grandad’s advice,
than the films that inspired his enthusiasm but all the same, our Jim started
me off on this silent film caper with his plea, just as I was thinking of going
to kick a ball in the garden. It’s possible that in so doing he prevented me
developing the skills to play for Liverpool Football Club but, realistically, I
lacked key attributes in that respect plus he was right, and I treasure the
memory of laughing along with Jim as the laughter unfolded on screen.
Jim was a decade younger than the duo, having been born
in 1901 but he grew up during the silent era, so he would have been entranced
by Chaplin, Roscoe Arbuckle, Mabel Normand and then Buster Keaton and Harold
Lloyd. Like Buster, his favourite was fellow Lancastrian Stan Laurel and his
partner Oliver Hardy and, whilst most of these films feature them detached or
developing as a pair, he would have recognised them from their earlier work
with Hal Roach and others. By the time Jim was courting my Nan, Jessie, their
partnership and personas were established, and whilst I can’t remember her
opinion of the boys, I can imagine her disapproving slightly or their
foolishness and the way that strong women – like her – were portrayed in their
films. That’s not to say our Jessie didn’t like a laugh, just on her own terms
– as Stan and Ollie noted, women were getting their way and their say.
I think of these two when I watch many films of this era and especially Jim when watching Stan and Ollie – a skilled working man, he loved their comedy and, like most, knew there was a lot of guile and hard work involved for them too. A similar amount of effort has gone into this absolute labour of love, the restoration of the early works in which Laurel and Hardy featured in the same films in the years leading up to their becoming an official double act with Putting Pants on Philip (1927) all restored with 2k scans from the best available materials held by collectors and archives around the globe – in a special two-disc Blu-ray edition for the first time in the UK – previously available in the USA from Flicker Alley.
Put ‘em both insect, before I part your hair with
lead!
Oliver, Stan and the Lucky Dog |
From the start, here with Lucky Dog (1921), Stan
Laurel is on his game and as polished a performer as you’d expect from a man
who first travelled over to the USA with Charles Chaplin when both were part of
Fred Karno’s Army. He took over the role in Karno’s stage hit Mumming Birds
which had made Charlie a stage star and started making films in 1917 (Nuts
in May) without the great man’s impact or unique persona. Success was to
take time and even though in Lucky Dog we can recognise a lot of Stan’s
core qualities – his timing, brilliance with mime and slapstick as well as
those heart-breaking and very Normand-esque, looks to camera – he was not quite
there even though producer Broncho Billy Anderson was convinced of his talent.
Oliver Hardy appears as a good-for-nothing petty thief in
this rather rambling tale who ends up palling up with the villain of the piece,
played by Jack Lloyd, whose girlfriend (Florence Gilbert) has been won away by
Stan’s charms and his, sadly un-named, found hound. Hardy had been making films
since 1914 with Outwitting Dad (1914) and, as with Stan, has the moves
but not the persona: both would be refined as they worked together and as their
chemistry naturally evolved. It is indeed bad history to view the pair from the
point of view of what we now know and just forcing to yourself to imagine the
space then between them allows the viewer to enjoy these films on their own
merits rather than a prelude to the main event.
Common themes begin to develop and it’s fascinating to
just binge and play Slapstick Bingo:
·
Guns not working - check
·
Despite this, people then being shot in the
bottom and jumping around - check
·
Stan screaming – check
·
Ollie at boiling point! - check
·
Stan looking direct to
camera appealing to us all with the cheekiest eyes in all film – check!
·
Food fights, bottoms being kicked, GBH, ABH, a
blow to the head… check, check, check, check, check!!!!!
This is forceful comedy and fast-moving, no one is
drifting off in this movie theatre. Been working six days flat at Liverpool
Lime Street Station, had a few beers on pay day, and fancy a lift, these men
know how you feel and the comedy you need!
Stan, Oliver, Mr C Chase and Finn |
The films are split three ways:
A. Guest
Stars and Solo
Stan and Ollie appearing as supporting characters in other’s stars films: Priscilla Dean in Slipping Wives (1927), Glenn Tryon in 45 Minutes from Hollywood (1926) and Mae Busch in Love ‘em and Weep (1927). Bush is outstanding, especially when she has to plank and fall face down, sure in the knowledge that Stan, trying to do two things at once, will catch her in time. He does this repeatedly and you wonder how hard her face had to be in the numerous rehearsals - true Aussie grit!
Dean is also a revelation away from her lady crook roles and matching the lads, gag for gag. Meanwhile, Tryon is more of a taste which I have failed to acquire but the film does feature some precious views of Hollywood including Our Gang and a brief glimpse of Theda Bara! Then there’s Max Davidson, in Call of the Cuckoo (1927) which features cameos from other Roach stars at the time including Charley Chase, James Finlayson, Stan and Ollie who play inmates from an asylum forcing Max and his family to move to a new house, any new house, things can’t get any worse can they?
Stan is more in evidence in these films and Oliver more of a standard straight man/heavy, but his face… it’s always a picture!
Mae Busch falls face flat with only Stan to save her... |
B. Prototype
pairings: Laurel with Hardy
These films include the boys in almost as a trio with the
great Scot, James Finlayson and there are four films here with them accompanied
by Viola Richard, who would go on to co-star with Charley Chase in his
brilliant Limousine Love (1928), not to mention Anita Garvin who would feature
in many a subsequent short as a woman offended by our bumbling pals.
Stans’ the lead in Why Girls Love Sailors (1927)
with Ollie as a rough and tough first mate on a smugglers’ ship. As so often in
these films Stan cross-dresses, dragging up in golden curls to save his girl
(Viola Richard) from kidnapping and worse.
The boys are in the army now for With Love and Hisses (1927) with
Stan playing clueless new recruit Cuthbert and Oliver as Sergeant Banner – “bouncer
in a café where the ambulance service was free…” Again, the boys are at
odds, Ollie a figure of bumbling authority and Stan anarchic and carefree. They
compete for the hand of Viola Richard in the historically-confused stone-age
romance Flying Elephants (1927) which is an absolute riot – exhibiting
some of the contemporary mores we wince about now etc – yet still involving the
physical brutality we love. The Elephants are indeed flying south for the
winter and Stan is again the master of unmanly behaviour gently lampooning
those more masculine signallers all around him.
History Stan |
In Sailors, Beware! (1927) Stan is Chester Chaste,
a taxi driver following some un-paying passengers on board an ocean liner on
which Ollie is the Pursar Cryder, who looks after all his passengers, especially
the blondes and brunettes… My wife asked about the redheads but what can I say,
it’s of its time and intertitles had to be snappy as well as sexist.
Interestingly Stan gets to stand up for himself a bit more in this film,
pushing a bathing beauty into a pool and upsetting everyone in taking offence…
that’s brazen irritation we would see far less of in future.
In Do Detectives Think? (1927), the boys are finally on the same side as two detectives assigned to protect James Finlayson’s Judge Foozle and his wife (Viola Richard) from violent retribution from escaped criminal The Tipton Slasher (Noah Young). They succeed as only they can.
James Finlayson |
C. Laurel
and Hardy
The joy of this set is watching the chemistry develop and
their roles finally settling over a relatively short period of time and yet one
in which they were making films at pace.
Duck Soup (1927) is an outlier and features the
boys as down and outs on the run from local authorities who want to forcibly
recruit them to fight forest fires. There’s something of Oliver’s airs and
graces and Stanley’s morbid fear of femininity – Neil Brand is not alone in
spotting a certain reading of his un-masculinity but this was the comedy
currency of the day. The two end up trying to sell a house they don’t own to a
gullible couple – one of whom wants to play billiards, the other who wants to
take a bath and becomes attached to Stan’s cross-dressed maid.
The films come with a rich variety of commentaries from
film historian and writer David Kalat, film writers Chris Seguin and Kyp
Harness, Patrick Vasey, editor of The Laurel & Hardy Magazine and host of
The Laurel & Hardy Podcast, Glenn Mitchell as well as accompanist and
L&H specialist Neil Brand. All bring so much love and expertise and its
especially interesting to hear Brands’ take as someone who experiences live
performances alongside these films on a regular basis: Neil knows where the
laughs are and he also understands how the boys still connect with our funny
bones a century onward.
Duck Soup... US slang for an easy win! |
Putting Pants on Philip and not a moment too
soon.
“It was certainly the first film in which Stan felt
them to be a team… the first at which both men felt to the fullest the
chemistry between them…” Professor John McCabe who knew Stan well.
For Brand too, Pants is the one “… when they
really come together as equals on screen… neither has control over the other…
they have the beginnings of an understanding of how their comedy is going to
work…” the two understand each other. The laughs arrive unbidden, even when we
can see it coming, even when Ollie can see what’s happening and the
candle flame burns Stan’s trousers… the helpless look to camera is there,
something we can all relate to, an accident taking place in real time,
unavoidably slowly. The relentless physicality they display also goes back to
the old music hall characters… this is a comedic species’ memory. Not so much a
learned behaviour as an adaptation that defines humanity.
Neil it is who provides commentary on The Battle of
the Century (1927), the almost completely reconstructed film which moves
from Ollie managing Stan as an unconvincing boxer to the greatest cream pie
fight in history. He highlights the roots of the jokes in the boxing section
which reflect the contemporary rematch between the great Jack Dempsey and Gene
Tunney which became known as The Long Count Fight after Dempsey ruined his
chances by not retreating to his corner after knocking his rival down. Tunney
got up after 14 seconds and went on to beat Dempsey again, ending his career.
Stand faces a similar situation when he accidentally knocks out his fearsome
rival… he does a Dempsey and gets flattened soon after.
In olden days a glimpse of stocking... |
Such snippets are vital in understanding the direction of
the humour but when it comes to the choreography of the pie fight, that’s a
work of pure art directed by Clyde Bruckman and featuring a cast of dozens all
led by the whimsy and chaos of Laurel and Hardy. Here they are pretty much the
finished article and, even though Ollie has insured Stan and is trying to
collect by arranging accidents, we never lose sympathy for either in their
fight for dignity and happiness.
And, as my son was having a difficult day, I sat him
down in front of the TV and told him to watch these lads, and I guarantee
they’ll make you laugh. The cycle continues and, we laughed!
The Battle of the Century |
SPECIAL FEATURES
·
Limited edition O-Card slipcase featuring new
artwork by Scott Saslow
·
1080p HD presentations on Blu-ray from new 2K
restorations
·
Scores by a variety of silent film composers
including Neil Brand, Antonio Coppola, Eric le Guen and Donald Sosin
·
Brand new audio commentaries on Lucky Dog, 45
Minutes from Hollywood, Duck Soup, Slipping Wives and Love ‘em and Weep
by film historian and writer David Kalat
·
Brand new audio commentaries on Why Girls
Love Sailors, With Love and Hisses, Sailors Beware and The
Second 100 Years by Patrick Vasey, editor of The Laurel & Hardy
Magazine and host of The Laurel & Hardy Podcast
·
Brand new audio commentaries on Do Detectives
Think? and The Battle of the Century by film writer Chris Seguin and
Kyp Harness (The Art of Laurel & Hardy: Graceful Calamity in the films)
·
Brand new audio commentaries on Flying
Elephants, Sugar Daddies, Call of the Cuckoo and Putting Pants on Philip by
Glenn Mitchell (The Laurel & Hardy Encyclopedia)
·
Brand new audio commentaries on The Second 100
Years and The Battle of the Century by silent film accompanist Neil Brand
·
Alternate Robert Youngson score on Putting Pants
on Philip, newly restored by Stephen C. Horne
·
Brand new interview with Neil Brand
·
Laurel & Hardy in the UK – 1932
recording by Laurel and Hardy to promote their UK tour, featuring footage of
the duo visiting Tynemouth
·
Turning Point: Stan Laurel – Extensive
interview with Stan Laurel from 1957
·
Stan Laurel talks to Tony Thomas – 1959
interview, featuring footage of Laurel & Hardy visiting Edinburgh as part
of their 1932 UK tour
·
Sailors Beware – Super 8 version with
audio commentary by Chris Seguin and Glenn Mitchell
·
The Bulldog Breed – Super 8 version of Do
Detectives Think? with audio commentary by Chris Seguin and Glenn Mitchell
·
The Mad Butler – Super 8 version of Do
Detectives Think? with audio commentary by Chris Seguin and Glenn Mitchell
·
The Battle of the Century Pie Fight –
Super 8 version with audio commentary by Chris Seguin
·
Stills Galleries for each short
·
A collector’s booklet featuring newly written
notes on each film by writer and comedian Paul Merton, and a new essay by
silent cinema expert Imogen Sara Smith
So, in summary, an essential acquisition for all fans of
the boys, silent comedy and laughing in general. Our Jim was not wrong!
You can order direct from Eureka themselves and all good stockists.
My kind of pun... |
Mr James Finlayson |
Viola Richard |
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