One of the few L&H three-reelers that justify its length. A rare foray into politics, Stan and Ollie get an extra boost from the inimitable Mae Busch in a tailor-made role. Thelma Todd and Norma Drew make the most of their limited screen time as "the wives." In his 1967 critical study Laurel & Hardy, Charles Barr ranked "Chickens Come Home" among the team's "weakest shorts." Nothing could be further from the truth.
9/10
Yup, he uses the traditional 1 to 4 star rating system for their films, but he rates this one with a "filled-in circle", which means it was a "dud."
I acquired the Barr book after having seen all the films dozens of times. I had grown up as a kid with Everson's book and the McCabe/Bann/Kilgore books as guides, but the Barr book was a revelation to me, since many of my favorites that those prior books somewhat panned were now elevated to a much higher status by Barr.
McCabe/Bann/Kilgore gave CHICKENS 2 and 1/2 "hats", which is slightly above-average, but odd since they gave THE LAUREL-HARDY MURDER CASE 4 hats! (I bought a re-print many years later and MURDER had been ammended to 2 hats.) Everson called it "one of the better L&H films from the period," and said the only real flaw was the length.
I took a closer look at this film to see if it could have been cut to 2 reels to improve it. It starts out slow, but as soon as Mae shows up there's not a wasted moment. She appears about 5 minutes into it -- so if you start from there it would still be about 25 minutes, but you obviously need at least 2 minutes before she shows up to set the stage. So the conclusion I came to was that it really needed to be a 3-reeler. (Of course, you can trim here and there, but there would be no reason to other than to shorten the length.)
The first time I saw this short, I loved it, and considered it one of their best. Then I went through a period where I soured on it. But it now remains one of my favorites. There's just so much going on, and any short of theirs with fast pacing I love. Without a clock in view, it really seems like a 2-reeler since it moves so fast.
When I was gowing up, I of course watched L&H a lot with family and friends on Super 8, and even at an early age I observed which ones were crowd-pleasers, and which ones weren't. I use to hear comments like "they sometimes get too repetitive" when we watched certain films.
I didn't get a copy of this one on film until I was an adult (that 2 and 1/2 hats rating put me off), but I realize that had I gotten it in Super 8 as a kid, this definitely would have been a crowd pleaser! They don't do any of that "repetitve" stuff that non-aficionados might not like.
Back in the 70s, I was lucky if I saw even a handful of their shorts on broadcast TV, so in most cases the first time I saw these shorts was via a Super 8 copy ordered from Blackhawk Films. I maybe got about 2 per year. I used the McCabe/Bann/Kilgore and Everson books as a guide unless I had happened to see the short before on TV. I don't think I ever got a film ranked less that 3 hats once I got that McCabe/Bann/Kilgore book, although I had bought some prior to that.
It may seem strange now, but when I finally got to see all the shorts by renting those Nostalgia Mechant tapes from the video store, I was angry about how many great shorts were panned by those books I had been referencing! There were more than a few I would have gotten on Super 8 in lieu of some of the ones I did get! (I kinda liked them, but BELOW ZERO and THE HOOSEGOW, both rated at 3 hats, were far from crowd pleasers.) I could never get my head around MURDER CASE being rated higher than both HELPMATES and THE MUSIC BOX, which were each rated 3 and 1/2 hats. A few other somewhat lesser shorts also got 4 hats! No real duds, but ANOTHER FINE MESS should have been more like 3 hats, not 4. At least I didn't buy MURDER CASE when I was a kid, mostly because Everson hated it!
Everyone's opinions may be different regarding these films, but my opinions are no less valid than the authors of those old books!