The ending of the short with a Frankenstein - Igor transfusion experiment between Stan and Ollie that I think works wonderfully as the final few minutes of a short - I'm just glad they left it at that and didn't do an entire short experiment with it ala TWICE TWO. We also get a few funny fourth wall breaking gags involving Stan physically dragging the screen using a wipe method, including the end of this short and their short film career.
In my mind, a Dr. Balinkoff-Igor(1) experiment, though this short precedes it by about 30 years.
(1)
https://gilligan.fandom.com/wiki/Dr._Boris_BalinkoffWho got transfused:
Mary Anne, The Professor (of course)
Ginger, Igor
Gilligan, Mr. Howell
The Skipper, Mrs. Howell
Later, Igor and Balinkoff with a cat and a dog! (I forgot which was which!)
I wouldn't be surprised if this short inspired the plot of the GILLIGAN episode. Many (including me) have felt that Gilligan and the Skipper were heavily inspired by Laurel and Hardy. Alan Hale did many camera-looks throughout the series. Plus, his father worked with the boys in OUR RELATIONS, so there's a good chance he actually met them.
THICKER THAN WATER is actually a below-average short in my book, keeping in mind that there has to be a fair amount of below-average shorts for the rankings to have any real meaning. It is still way better than any episode of FRIENDS, for example. (I don't like FRIENDS.)
I get a ONE GOOD TURN vibe while watching this short. Both have auctions. Both are structured similarly in 3 acts.
First act: Laurel and Hardy's every day living environment is established. Some of their possessions are destroyed due to Stan's ineptitude. (Fire destroys their tent and clothes -- Stan placing dishes on a hot stove causes Ollie to drop them when picking them up off the stove.)
Second act: A money problem arises, and they fail miserably trying to resolve it. Both times, an auction is the centerpiece.
Third act: a 3rd party reacts when hearing about the boys' failed scheme -- and a very unusual ending occurs with the boys essentially switching characters.
I doubt that was a coincidence.
L&H shorts are usually not memorable because of special effects accomplished via an optical printer, in this case the optical wipe. This short just doesn't have the energy that most of their shorts have. The dishwashing bit is great, as is the verbal exhange with Finlayson and Pollard. But everything else in the short is flat and pedestrian for them.
In their domestic comedies, one or both of them is usually trying to pull one over on their wives. In this case, Ollie's intentions are good, so to me the humor in them losing $290 isn't funny. I also think it is much funnier when both of them have wives who appear in a film.
--------
We've always been led to believe (or at least that's my impression) that The Depression was horrible for most people from late October 1929 until the beginning of WWII, when it actually got worse! Then I see how L&H's living conditions were portrayed on the screen, and you can see the big change in the 4 years between 1931 and 1935, when ONE GOOD TURN and THICKER THAN WATER were made, respectively. In the former, the boys are homeless living in a makeshift tent. In the latter, they appear well-to-do, Hardy moreso than Laurel, however. Yes, they still are in debt, but so are many people in the year 2024! My point is that it appears that the Roach studio was always trying to present the boys (and Our Gang, too) in conditions that would ring true for the majority of their audience, though I doubt Roach expected people living in tents to go to the movie theater. Skipping ahead a few years, 1938's BLOCK-HEADS presents life for the Hardys as fairly prosperous with a bright future. Their apartment building is fairly upscale, and everyone in the building and on the street is dressed very well. I've always gotten the sense when watching that film that there was a big relief and people had not only seen the light at the end of the tunnel, but had actually passed through it. Too bad WWII was just around the corner.
BTW, they passed up a perfect opportunity for a "tell me that again" scene, when Stan tells Ollie to buy the furniture outright.