Another Fine Mess
Another Fine Mess | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | James Parrott |
Produced by | Hal Roach |
Written by | H.M. Walker |
Starring |
Stan Laurel Oliver Hardy |
Music by | Leroy Shield |
Cinematography | Jack Stevens |
Edited by | Richard C. Currier |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release dates | November 29, 1930 |
Running time | 28' 09" |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Another Fine Mess is a 1930 short comedy film starring Laurel and Hardy. It is based on the 1908 play Home From The Honeymoon by Arthur J. Jefferson, Stan Laurel's father, and is a talkie remake of the 1927 silent Laurel and Hardy film Duck Soup.
Plot
Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel are vagabonds being chased by the police. They hide in the cellar of the mansion of a Quatermain-esque adventurer, Colonel Wilburforce Buckshot (James Finlayson), who departs for a safari in South Africa. The mansion is to be rented out until his return, but the staff sneak off for a holiday, leaving the house empty. The boys are surrounded by police and have to deceive a honeymooning couple wanting to rent the house. Ollie disguises himself as Buckshot and Stan disguises himself as both butler Hives and chambermaid Agnes.
During a girl-talk scene with Thelma Todd and Stan (disguised as Agnes), Stan's comments get sillier and sillier. The real Colonel returns to fetch his bow and arrows, to find the disorder that had ensued after his departure. Ollie continues his masquerade as Colonel Buckshot to the real colonel, until he sees the portrait on the wall of the real owner. Stan and Ollie escape the ensuing row dressed as a wildebeest on a stolen tandem bicycle. They ride into a railroad tunnel and encounter a train, but emerge riding unicycles.
Cast
- Stan Laurel
- Oliver Hardy
- Harry Bernard
- Bobby Burns
- Betty Mae Crane
- Beverly Crane
- Eddie Dunn
- Jimmy Finlayson
- Charles K. Gerrard
- Bill Knight
- Bob Mimford
- Gertrude Sutton
- Thelma Todd
Production
Unlike other Laurel and Hardy shorts, the technical credits are recited by two girls in usherette outfits. Beverly and Betty Mae Crane performed the "talking titles" for several Roach productions during the 1930–31 season as an experimental alternative to standard title cards.
This was also the first Laurel and Hardy film to feature the well-known Leroy Shield scorings for background music. A couple of previous episodes began experimenting with it, but, beginning with this film, these tunes would be heard regularly in Our Gang, Charley Chase, Boy Friends, and other Hal Roach productions.
No foreign-language versions are known to exist of this short. It was possibly shown with subtitles in non-English-speaking countries, as audiences were critical of the unnatural quality of the alternate versions.
See also
External links
- Another Fine Mess at the Internet Movie Database
- Another Fine Mess at AllMovie
- Another Fine Mess at the TCM Movie Database
- Another Fine Mess at Rotten Tomatoes