Hot Ice:
(Short # 165 in Nyuk Nyuk Nyuk: The Columbia Shorts of The Three Stooges)
I'll have a review of a feature film tonight... it will be posted a few hours later than usual, due to the cockeyed schedule I have this week.
Perhaps I am a little generous in just giving Hot Ice a passing grade. After all, it sort of awkwardly combines the opening few minutes from The Hot Scots (the Stooges apply to be “yardmen” at Scotland Yard, not knowing it means “they pick up the trash in the yard” with Crime on Their Hands, a short which had film noir elements-you see someone murdered, an event that never happens in the Stoogeiverse-and this version lost most of those elements. Heck, their wardrobe between the new and old footage obviously doesn't match if you're paying even a bit of attention.
Yet, I still laughed again as they looked for the Punjab Diamond, and still laughed that Shemp accidentally swallowed it, and still laughed that a gorilla somehow became involved. That old footage felt sillier in this context and the new ending was so oddly flat... yet that unintentionally made me laugh and there was a quality new bit where they search a lady's purse & pull out various weapons, including dynamite, a hatchet and poison. Sometimes, something as simple as that can win me over.
Blunder Boys:
(Short # 166 in Nyuk Nyuk Nyuk: The Columbia Shorts of The Three Stooges)
The last worthwhile Three Stooges short starring Shemp. I can’t proclaim this with 100% accuracy as there’s only 4 more after this he appears in. However, there’s a strong degree of certainty just from the fact this the last wholly original Shemp short-there’s no stock footage and it’s a new story. Heck, it could be the final very good effort period, given the few Joe Besser efforts I’ve seen and the poor reception the Besser era has among fans.
Furthermore, this is a spoof of Dragnet. At least some will be familiar from the 1987 comedic spoof of the property; while it’s unimportant for the viewer to know this to enjoy Blunder Boys, Dragnet was originally a police procedural drama revolving around LAPD Detective Joe Friday, who investigates cases in a realistic milieu. Friday is attached to the phrase “Just the facts, ma’am”… although that is a misquotation and he never said that exact phrase anywhere. It was a TV show on several occasions, most prominently from 1951 to 1959, then from 1967 to 1970.
Instead of star-franchise creator Jack Webb as a master of his craft, we first see the trio in the Army; they bungled their way to success. Then, off to college to major in criminology; despite their usage of fancy $10 words, they in fact blundered their way to barely passing, then more blunders occurred w/ their first case, involving a slippery cuss known as The Eel.
Along the way there are funny pun names, new routines, some running gags, absurd scenarios (such as the boys entering a women’s Turkish bath), and more magic that reminded me of the Good Old Days with these good old boys, no matter who the third Stooge was. This featured a few other lasts; that includes the final appearance of Al Thompson-a supporting actor who appeared in several dozen shorts for the preceding 20 years-and the last short released when Shemp was alive. This was filmed in early ’55 but released November the 3rd of that year; he died from a heart attack 19 years later. I’ll give a better eulogy once his final appearance is reviewed soon.
The final few years of the Stooges at Columbia don’t have a great reputation; at least Blunder Boys is well worth seeing for those that like Howard, Fine & Howard yet haven’t tackled this yet.
Husbands Beware:
(Short # 167 in Nyuk Nyuk Nyuk: The Columbia Shorts of The Three Stooges)
Believe it or not, they even remade Brideless Groom. As that’s one of the most famous Stooge shorts (partially due to its public domain status and partially due to Groom being one of the best they ever did, full stop) an explanation of how it was “inspired” by Buster Keaton’s Seven Chances and permanent bachelor Shemp was forced to marry a lady to earn a huge inheritance.
This was less than the sum of its parts. The first almost seven minutes are Moe & Larry marrying Shemp’s sisters. They are best described as “fuller-figured” and in stereotypical fashion, they suddenly turn into shrilly harpies who demand their husbands cook them a meal. Them attempting to cook a turkey that still has its feathers on (don’t worry, those feathers were removed… via shaving them off!) was as wacky as expected. That said, an entire short where Moe & Larry suffer further abuse from their new wives could have been a lot of fun.
After that, a truncated version of Brideless Groom which either excludes or edits down all the great moments & routines that made Groom legendary. Laughs are still present but the strongest feeling I got from Husbands Beware: I’d rather revisit Brideless Groom. There is a new ending to Beware, and… “confusion” was my main comment concerning that. At least Emil Sitka got to say The Line on several occasions.