Walter Long provides the ideal comic menace in this underrated Laurel and Hardy two-reeler. Somewhat schizophrenic, "Any Old Port!" begins as a grim melodramatic parody of D.W. Griffith's "Broken Blossoms" and ends with a hilarious boxing match between Battling Laurel and Mugsie Long. Regardless of the disjointed storyline, Stan, Ollie and director James W. Horne keep the laughs coming. Second-tier L&H is definitely better than none.
7/10
This is an example of a L&H short that can't be summed up in a short sentence usually turning out to be one of their lesser ones. I agree that it is second-tier L&H. Which means it is still pretty darned good compared to, say, an episode of FRIENDS. Any episode -- even ones considered by fans to be "the best." (Spoiler -- I never liked that show!)
Like PACK UP YOUR TROUBLES, it's like they passed a piece of paper around the table, and asked everyone to write down an idea for the next L&H film, and then combined all the ideas into one picture.
It's starts out great, and you think you are in for 20 minutes of hilarity, then after they sign-in at the desk, it goes downhill. Their outfits are unusual (seafaring "garb"), which offers a nice change of pace, but then they are quickly back in their traditional suits and derbies. In the LIVE GHOST, I wonder if Walter Long had remembered them as seafarers, that being the reason he asked them to help him shanghai a crew.
After the sign-in scene, the next (and only other) great scene is the boys stopping for a bite to eat at a mobile diner, complete with a counter and stools! (Did they really have those in 1932? They show up in a few Our Gangs around that time, too.) I like how he pawns off Stan to fight promoter Harry Bernard for cash so he, and only he, can enjoy a nice meal. (Well, as nice a meal as you can get from a mobile diner, I guess.)
Scenes like that are very Abbott and Costello like, even though they preceded A&C. It is more typical for Bud Abbott to risk the welfare of Costello for his own gain as opposed to Ollie taking advantage of Stan. Since he does basically the same thing in THE BATTLE OF THE CENTURY -- though that time Stan was already a fighter, but Ollie risks Stan's well-being to collect on an insurance policy -- perhaps Lou Costello got the idea for it there, which is a valid theory considering that Costello appears as an extra in that film. The best, and funniest example, occurs in their very first starring picture, BUCK PRIVATES. The only hole in my theory is that I've never read about Costello contributing ideas to their films, but it is still a strong possibility that the concept of Bud always taking advantage of him might have been developed by him when they first started working in burlesque. In any case, though this was not a concept that was followed very often by the boys, it did show up in a few of thier pictures over the years (e.g. OLIVER THE EIGHTH -- Ollie's subterfuge in not mailing Stan's letter to Mae Busch, THE DANCING MASTERS -- which repeated the bits with Ollie trying to collect on Stan's insurance policy by forcing him to get injured.)
Our Gang also borrowed the concept in GLOVE TAPS. Alfalfa is convinced that Spanky will fight Butch, but Spanky has other ideas -- Alfalfa will fight him!
So 2 great (yes, great) scenes in a 2-reeler is still pretty darned good, if you ask me.