http://www.lordheath.com/index.php?p=1_150_They-Go-Boomhttp://www.laurelandhardycentral.com/theyboom.htmlhttp://www.imdb.com/title/tt0020489/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x24vbct_they-go-boom-b-w-1929-laurel-hardy_shortfilmsWatch THEY GO BOOM! in the link above
Not one of the more known or critically acclaimed Laurel and Hardy shorts. Part of the reason is because the soundtrack was missing for a long time and has only been available the past few decades. Something tells me the baby boomers didn't see this one on TV as much as the others. As for me? An absolute favorite of mine. I have this thing for silent and early talkie comedies that take place in these sad looking places yet somehow still manage to be funny. Chaplin started it with several films, and this is one of two Laurel and Hardy films I throw in this category, the other gets name checked in the laurelandhardycentral.com link above. I suppose the beginning of CASH AND CARRY is another great example, come to think of it. Anyway, here Stan and Ollie live in this tiny two room little tenement rental, about as dingy of a place as you can imagine. On top of it, poor Oliver has a terrible cold that Stan fails with, time and time again, to heal. Through such sadness, they create laughter.
Minus the dingy setting, consider this Laurel and Hardy's GOOF ON THE ROOF in the sense that it contains very limited setting yet a lot of slapstick comedy that is completely engaging. Being 1929, there's no TV to set up, but like the Stooge short, we have one main room and a little kitchen where all the action takes place. There really isn't much to say since it's such a simple premise, so I'll just name some favorite parts.
In the kitchen, there's this one part where Stan gets his socks covered in fly paper, causing this sticky mess. His solution is to turn the socks inside out and then put them on! The patented Stan smile that he gives the audience like he just did something intelligent never fails to make me laugh. I love Ollie's talking like he has the sniffles, nice acting job. I love the "Smile All the While" sign that hangs above their bed and the way Stan nails it in, only to catch a water pipe in the wall behind it. Eventually, the pipe bursts, the picture falls on Ollie's head, and Ollie gets all wet in the process. Anytime Charlie Hall appears is great. The Three Stooges always have men bigger than them as their superiors, but there is some perverse humor I get watching a diminutive Charlie Hall acting assertive towards the relatively larger Stan and Ollie. The greatest part of this short is the ending, the first truly great sight gag in a talkie Laurel and Hardy film. The air mattress blowing up and the aftermath it leaves gives me a belly laugh only rivaled by the kitchen explosion in BLOCK-HEADS.
"Why don't you do something to help me?" This is a line Ollie says to Stan several times over the years. Stan tries to help Ollie time and time again here, maybe Ollie should have learned his lesson. For the sake of comedy, it's a good thing he didn't.
10/10