Three Stooges- Nutty But Nice
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Average customer review:Product Description
A DUCKING THEY DID GO (1939): Hiding out after a daring watermelon heist the Three Stooges take jobs selling Duck Club memberships. But things aren't all they're quacked up to be and Larry Moe and Curly soon find they're decoys in a scam involving the club.HOI POLLOI (1935): You can take out the garbage but you can't take the garbage man out of the Stooge as a respected professor finds out when he wagers his colleague $10000 that he can transform even the Stooge-est men into gentlemen.HALF-WITS HOLIDAY (1947): In this remake of Hoi Polloi the Three Stooges are plumbers who plunge to great depths to be introduced to high society. This was the last starring role for Curly and features the first appearance by Emil Sitka.HIGHER THAN A KITE (1943): Mechanical failures Larry Moe and Curly take refuge in a bomb shelter while attempting to escape after they rearranged the engine of their Colonel's shiny new car. When they drop in on a meeting of German officers they somehow manage to overthrow the enemy.FALSE ALARMS (1936): The Three Stooges make a date with disaster when they try to keep up with their social affairs while working for the fire department. Larry and Moe are determined to resist temptation but when Curly needs dates for his honey's friends everyone gets hosed.NUTTY BUT NICE (1940): In order to cheer up a girl whose father has been kidnapped two doctors prescribe laughter to be administered by the Stooges. It doesn't work but when they find out her father always answers his daughter's yodels they discover the real cure for the problem.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: COMEDY Rating: NR UPC: 043396054943 Manufacturer No: 05494
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #58784 in DVD
- Brand: Sony
- Released on: 2000-11-14
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC
- Original language: English, Spanish
- Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French, Portuguese
- Dubbed in: Portuguese
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .25 pounds
- Running time: 105 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Back when the "Blondie" comic strip was very young, Dagwood wanted to marry a flapper against the wishes of his rich family and staged a hunger strike for her sake. This is the basic premise of "The Sitter Downers" (1937, short number 27 in the Columbia series) in which the boys want to marry against a father's wishes and camp out in his living room. The second half is concerned with the now married Stooges trying to build a home for their brides with predictable disastrous results. Very funny at the start, stale material in the second section.
"Nutty but Nice" (1940, number 47) has the boys trying to help a melancholic girl by finding her kidnapped father. It starts interestingly with the boys as a team running a musical restaurant, but it turns to more familiar material as they try to escape from an apartment using the dumbwaiter. (They will never learn not to send Curly down first.) What makes this entry more interesting is that Vernon Dent gets to play a straight, sympathetic part that calls upon him actually to laugh at the Stooges' routines.
"Slippery Silks" (1936, number 19) starts with the boys as "fine" woodworkers--destroying a precious Chinese box brought in by Vernon Dent for reproduction--and then finding they have inherited a gown shop. After they reason that designing furniture and gowns is all the same, the results are truly funny as Larry's cabinet-like creations are displayed by attractive models who play it straight. However, the director (Preston Black) decided that the script needed a good pie throw (or cake throw in this instance) ending, and the last sequence offers nothing new along those lines. --Frank Behrens
From the Back Cover
This DVD contains six episodes on one DVD: A-Ducking They Did Go - The Stooges are tricked by some con men into selling memberships to a phony duck hunting club. After the Stooges sell all the memberships to the police department, the bad guys skip town, leaving the Stooges to deal with a duck-less lake, a lodge full of cops and plenty of trouble ahead. Moe and Larry stall the cops with duck decoys while Curly searches for some real ducks, but the flock he brings belongs to local farmer and the boys leave in a hail of buckshot.
Hoi Polloi - A professor bets that he can turn the Stooges into gentlemen. After many attempts to teach them etiquette, he takes them to a fancy society party. The party quickly degenerates, but the Stooges end leaving as gentleman after all while the other guests have adopted Stooge-like behavior.
Half-Wits Holiday (aka No Gents...No Cents) - Betting one of his colleagues that he can turn the Stooges into gentlemen within 60 days, a professor tries to teach the boys proper manners with the help of his pretty daughter. After many frustrating attempts, he introduces the Stooges at a high society party. At first things go all right, but the party soon turns into a wild pie fight.
Higher than a Kite - Working for the R.A.F. in England as auto mechanics, the Stooges wreck an officer's car and try to hide in a sewer pipe which turns out to be a bomb. After the bomb is dropped behind enemy lines, Moe and Curly disguise themselves as German officers and Larry dresses as a seductive fraulein. While general Bommel chases after Larry, Moe and Curly steal secret plans from the high command.
False Alarms - The Stooges are firemen who are constantly in trouble. Warned that one more incident will cost them their jobs, Curly decides to sneak out anyway to visit his girlfriend. Her two friends need dates too, and the only way Curly can get Moe and Larry out of the station is to pull a fire alarm. The fire truck leaves without Moe and Larry, so they steal the captain's new car to make it to the call first. They manage to get Curly and return to the station, but they wreck the car and must leave on the run.
Nutty But Nice - Working as singing waiters, the Stooges are enlisted by a doctor to try and cheer up a little girl. Her father, a banker, was kidnapped with $300,000 worth of bonds. Failing to cheer the girl, the Stooges decide to look for the father and wind up in the bad guys' hideout. The villains return and, after a wild fight, the boys free the missing man.
Customer Reviews
Five out of six isn't bad
This disc contains 6 shorts, five of which are of excellent quality even if not all of them might be considered top bona-fide classics. The other one had the makings of a great short, but sadly is marred by the black cloud looming over it. Since a number of other reviewers have already described the plots, I'll skip the redundancy and go straight to my opinions on each.
'Hoi Polloi' (1935) is an absolute bona-fide classic, probably one which just about every fan has in his or her personal Top 10 favorites list. There's not a dull or wasted moment in here, and none of the numerous remakes of this short could ever come close to topping the classic original. This was their tenth short made at Columbia, and right around the time when they'd finally really perfected their screen characters, their comedy style, and their screen relationship. From this point on out they only got better and better.
'False Alarms' (1936) is another of my personal favorites. There are also too many great scenes in here to list; the entire thing flows so perfectly, with nary a dull or wasted moment in sight. To give just one example, I love the scene where, for one brief moment, you're made to believe that Moe actually stuffed Larry down the drain of the sink! I also love the scene near the end where Curly and Minnie (June Gittelson, his girlfriend Maisie's fat friend) are slapping one another back and forth, though if it were any other actor I'd be horrified and would view it as a shocking and unacceptable act of violence against a woman.
'A-Ducking They Did Go' (1939) is yet another perfect and hilarious classic, from their prime period. Perhaps it's not one of their top-notch classics, but I would consider it a strong second-tier classic. Among my favorite scenes are when Moe eye-pokes the inflatable duck and when Curly points a rifle at his own head so he can shoot a duck on top of it. However, the ending is recycled footage of the ending of 'A Pain in the Pullman' (1937), and feels really bizarre and out of place, particularly since it doesn't really have anything to do with everything else that just happened.
'Nutty But Nice' (1940), the title track, has a plot similar to that of 'Cash and Carry' (1937). A lot of fans don't really like either because they don't feel it's very funny or believable for the boys to be shown as chivalrous do-gooders, but it's nice to see a softer side of them, particularly knowing how much they did for disadvantaged children in real life. And seeing them as noble heroes is certainly a better fit than seeing them as cowboys in all of those Westerns they did, a role that never really fit their screen characters. Even if one doesn't care for how they're cast as do-gooders, at least one can appreciate the great fight they have with the bad guys. (On a side note, the line about the horse they encounter on the street possibly being the reincarnation of Betty's father was a bit disconcerting, since it calls to mind the premise of those unspeakably awful Besser-era shorts 'Hoofs and Goofs' and 'Horsing Around'; the less said about those, the better!)
'Higher Than a Kite' (1943) is a war-themed short, with some classic slapstick in the car repair shop and then some great satirising of the Nazis. It's much easier to watch WWII-era movies making fun of the Germans as opposed to the Japanese because the Germans were only made fun of for their horrible government, not on account of their race. The first half of the short is particularly great because we don't often see Moe getting so much physical abuse and punishment as opposed to being the one doling it out in spades. Although there is one small detail that begs for an answer, even though comedies aren't always supposed to make sense: How did that Bulldog from the US Marine Corps get behind the German lines?
'Half-Wits' Holiday' (made in 1946, though released in early 1947) is a remake of the far superior 'Hoi Polloi,' and actually could have been a pretty good short in its own right. There are some pretty good scenes, like the pie fight at the end and the dinner scene. It also was the wonderful Emil Sitka's debut as a supporting actor for the Stooges. However, it's incredibly hard to watch, heartbreaking even, knowing that Curly had his near-fatal stroke during filming (although at least he doesn't look or act as sick in this as he did in, say, 'Beer Barrel Polecats' or 'Three Loan Wolves'). It's hard watching him take physical abuse in this one regardless, knowing how sick he was. And when he walks offscreen shortly before the pie fight begins, it's a really sad feeling, knowing we'll never see him again except as in a brief cameo in 'Hold That Lion!' a few shorts later, that moments later he slumped out of the director's chair, unable to move, and crying because he was unable to speak. It's even more disconcerting to watch the pie fight, knowing that Harry Cohn, the slavedriver who ran Columbia, actually made Moe and Larry continue filming instead of going with him to the hospital. It must have taken their all to not show their real feelings during the final scene. The ending itself is also really sudden, like the director just decided to call it a day and end the film then and there, even though the ending was kind of in media res. I'm surprised the studio didn't just use stock footage of an earlier pie fight, given how enamoured they were of stock footage. Watching this short feels like being kicked in the stomach, and leaves a very heavy depressing feeling.
Still, apart from how difficult it is for most people to sit through the final short, the previous five are awesome, making this disc very recommendable.
VERY SOLID THREE STOOGES DVD
Nutty but nice is a very strong compilation Stooges DVD. It features one bona fide classic with Hoi Polloi and several more great early Curlys.
"Hoi Polloi" - 1935 - the Classic Stooges plot with A professor betting that he can turn the stooges into gentlemen. After many attempts to teach them etiquette, he brings them to a fancy society party. The stooges new found manners don't last very long, and the party quickly degenerates. a plot Used many times, this one is the best!
"Half-Wits Holiday" - 1947 - This is a complete remake of Hoi Polloi and unfortunately Curly suffered a stroke while filming this one and he's not even seen during the last half of this short making it bittersweet.
"Higher than a Kite - 1943 - The stooges are mechanics working for the in England. After wrecking an officers car they hide out in a sewer pipe which turns out to a bomb. They are dropped over Germany and Find themselves behind enemy lines. Moe and Curly disguise as German officers and Larry dresses as a seductive fraulein. While General Bommel chases after Larry, Moe and Curly steal the secret plans from the high command.
"False Alarms" 1936 - The stooges are firemen who are constantly getting in trouble, they've been warned that one more incident will cost them their jobs. Curly sneaks out anyway to visit his girlfriend. She has two friends who need dates, but the only way Curly can get Moe and Larry out of the station is to pull a fire alarm. The firetruck leaves without Moe and Larry, so they steal the captains new car to make it to the call first. They manage to get Curly and get back to the station, but in doing so wreck the car and must leave on the run.
"Nutty But Nice" 1940 - The stooges are waiters who are enlisted by a doctor to try and cheer up a little girl. The girl's father is a banker who was kidnapped with $300,000 worth of bonds. Failing to cheer up the girl, the stooges go out looking for the father and by a series of coincidences wind up in the bad guys hideout. The villains return and after a wild fight the boys free the missing man.
"A Ducking they Did Go" -1939 - The stooges are tricked by some con men into selling memberships to a phony Canvas Back duck hunting club. They end up selling all the memberships to the police department causing the con-men to skip town. The stooges are stuck at a hunting lodge full of cops and the mayor but no ducks!
Hoi Polloi is certainly one of the most famous stooges shorts and A Ducking they Did Go and False Alarms are both excellent as well. VEry good Stooges DVD!
Forget the other reviewer, it's great!
I don't know if the other reviewer in Chicago saw the same DVD as I have, but don't be deterred by his questionable review. I didn't notice any graininess as he described (he must have been toying with a magnifying glass on his high-definition tv). Columbia, as they have in the last three Stooge releases, has used high quality masters, if not the original negative, for these compilations, and it is obvious. The sound (although somewhat muted) and picture are excellent. As for the skits, they are, as usual, hilarious! The only complaint I have is that "Hoi Polloi" and "Half-Wits Holiday" are virtually indistinguishable from each other, with the same identical story and some exact lines with each other. Otherwise, don't be afraid to buy this disc, you will not be disappointed!




