It's like watching them on stage.
I'll take that a step further. It is like watching the fellas perform a routine on film, uninterrupted. Why is that so important? Because we have so precious few outtakes and behind the scenes footage of the Stooges, any bits like this that are allowed to progress without cuts, any pieces of production audio (think Jules yelling, "Cut!", Larry getting screen direction, and the now-deleted piece of dialogue read off-camera that was excised from Half-Wits' Holiday for the collection dvd) and you get a real, albeit sneaky, glimpse of what went into making a Stooge picture.
Really! To me that stuff is just as important as any of the little tidbits Moe would give us in his later years in radio interviews and television appearances. I'm always looking to see little sneaky behind-the-scenes glimpses of, perhaps, a camera crew reflected in a car door (One of the Charley Chase shorts betrays the viewer's omniscient illusion when the camera crew can be spotted in a reflection more than once during a lengthy driving scene), wobbly scenery (walls and doors in
The Hot Scots), a flubbed line (You're really a friend, r-lly spirit!), the director triumphantly gesturing in front of the camera when a special effect works (the ceiling collapse in Pick a Peck of Plumbers), Kirby wires not hidden by the addition of film grain, boom mics and shadows (check out those Yodeling bits from
Nutty But Nice)..
Things like that are, IMHO, priceless in older films. Perhaps only in retrospect? Maybe little things like that would take the average viewer out of the film, but just think-- wouldn't it have been great to hear Curly slip out of character in an outtake? Get a little insight into what gets Larry motivated for a scene? All the studio outtakes were scrapped and salvaged to recover precious silver, we know that. Minor editing slip-ups, now, are as close as we'll ever get to that. Poo-poo to Sony for tightening the editing in Half-Wits (the snippet of audio following, "..Let me make gentlemen of you." can be heard intact on the old, single disc release called "Nutty But Nice") as I, personally, do not believe it necessary.
Jeez! Maybe I shouldn't be such a rabid fan? I think I need to run my ages old print of
Grips, Grunts and Groans to clear my head.