Once again, I'm O K with this, Buster's timing of the physical routines is incomparable, and again his distaff partner is not only excellent, but also a very good sport. The slapstick borders on the mathematical. At first I thought she was Mary Wickes, but as the bit went on, it was obvious that she was a trained tumbler, or acrobat, or stuntwoman, or somesuch, and I've never heard of Mary Wickes having such training. So Elsie-Whatever-your-last-name-is-I-missed-it-sorry, Brava. And Dorothy Applebee turns out to be a natural with Buster, in looks ( i.e. not only does she look great but also if looks could kill Buster would be pink mist ), attitude, and even height. I don't know how far apart her Buster shorts were ( THAT certainly sounds wrong ), but for our purposes it's three in a row and I say brava, brava, brava. Seventeen minutes of Snood has ten times the comedy of Parlor, Bedroom, and Bath, IMHO.
Clearly, Clyde Bruckman is all over these as well as the stooges stuff in the 1940's. The flagpole scenes both here and with the stooges bear his stamp, to cite one of a hundred instances. I assume Buster took a lot of comfort in having Clyde on the team as an emollient to the sledge-hammer direction of Jules White.
One thing that Buster didn't have that most of the other aces had is a distress call, and it's apparent here in the flagpole scene. At Columbia, all four stooges had distinct and memorable screams of fright, and elsewhere both Laurel and Hardy had theirs ( Hardy's was known as the best in the business ), and Lou Costello had a huge repertoire. Even in The Wizard of Oz, all three character-heroes had easily identifiable distress calls, which significantly enhanced the terror, at least to Little Chief Apumtagribonitz. Buster on the flagpole has human, natural grunts as he tries to save himself, understandable in that he was doing his own stunts, and I honestly can't imagine what a trademark ( even overdubbed ) distress call would have sounded like from Buster, since his real voice was nothing but the familiar croaky monotone, but the kids in my day would imitate those nyuk-nucks and woo-woos and eeb-eebs and gnong-gnong-gnongs and heeeey-Abbotts, and in that arena Buster was no more than an annoyed oyster.