I think there are certainly more good than bad Laurel and Hardy films and the best ones are extremely good - like among the all time best. But there are some mediocre to bad films. BONNIE SCOTLAND is saved by two scenes and I absolutely loathe TWICE TWO. ANY OLD PORT isn’t so great either. The Stooges had their uninspired eras for sure, but from say 1939 - 1942 or 1943, not even Laurel and Hardy had a run like that. Basically when it was only Jules and Del directing. The greatest run in my opinion is Buster Keaton - his silent independent run, which took up almost the entire decade of the twenties, was incredible.
All that said, while not a classic, I’m a little easier on THE LAUREL-HARDY MURDER CASE these days than I was when I wrote this review.
I, too, am a little easier on MURDER CASE than I used to be.
We'll have to agree to disagree on L&H not having a great run. I'd say the run was from 1927 - 1938. You could say to 1940 as well, but I feel the last 2 Roach pictures in 1940 were a step or 2 down, and FLYING DEUCES wasn't that great either.
There's bound to be a few clunkers, but the ratio of good-very-good-great to clunkers is extremely high. TWICE TWO is a real outlier, and I'm not convinced that it ruins the great run (like a hit that destroys a no-hitter.) They did have some weak ones at the dawn of talkies -- but just about every comedian (and dramatic actor, for that matter) ran into the same problem.
Regarding TWICE TWO, I've long held the belief that had they not dubbed-in those annoying voices for the "wives" (especially for Laurel), it would have survived as one of their better shorts. I've also long wondered if the soundtrack exists of Stan and Babe's voices for the wives before they were dubbed-in. (Ever notice that when voices are dubbed, it sounds like someone sitting in a studio in front of a microphone? -- which it is. Why don't they try to simulate the surroundings and acoustics of where the movie was filmed?)
Funny you mention ANY OLD PORT, since Skretvedt, in his L&H:THE MAGIC BEHIND THE MOVIES, says it resembles a Stooges short directed by Jules White! It's not one of their best, but I wouldn't call it a clunker. It has a good pace, and doesn't suffer from that "deadness" of a few of their early talkies, and TWICE TWO. I've always enjoyed it.
BONNIE SCOTLAND is not one of their better features, but if you cut out the unnecessary plot footage, there's some first-rate L&H in there! (IMO, more than just 2 scenes. I do wish that they had tightened-up the rooming house scene, and given it a bit more "punch." As it stands, it looks as if they were fiming one of their weakest 1929 early talkies. ) It's certainly better than SWISS MISS and PACK UP YOUR TROUBLES. Also, L&H were sorta "forced" into features, and I think I read somewhere that Stan would have preferred that they stuck to shorts. Artistically, they were a victim of their own success.
I've never liked to have comedians "complete" with each other, and I avoid saying this comedian was better than that one, etc. Yes, the Stooges had a great run that was interrupted, unfortunatley, by ill health and death a few times. But so did L&H, Keaton (as you mentioned), Chaplin, Our Gang, and Abbott and Costello. I love Charley Chase, but now having seen most of his Roach talkies, he had lots of clunkers. I love W.C. Fields, but he unfortunately never had a good long uninterrupted run, and his number of really great must-see films is somewhat equivalent to those of The Marx Bros, whom I also love.
It's really great that both L&H and the Stooges have such a large body of work to enjoy -- and each had their fair share of clunkers!