I've always been a fan of Leonard Maltin's work. But he was way off the mark earlier this month when he called these "among the worst two-reelers ever made."
Overall, I thought these were a lot of fun and undeserving of their obscure status. THE BIG KICK stood out from the pack for me, an excellent short. THE HEAD GUY, THE FIGHTING PARSON and THE SHRIMP were also very good. THE KING and SKIRT SHY were decent to slightly above decent, each having their moments but not quite as good as the other four already mentioned.
I'd put HOTTER THAN HOT in that pack as well though it's tougher to assess that film as long as the soundtrack is missing. The couch scene was the highlight. I'd love to re-assess it should the soundtrack ever surface. SKY BOY, the other one missing its soundtrack, was the only one I didn't connect with at all.
I don't think I had seen her in anything before but I liked Nancy Dover and thought she played well with Langdon. Later known as Judith Barrett, she lived all the way to 2000.
Tom Ricketts, the old man in SHIRT SKY, had a memorable turn there. Born in 1853, he might be the earliest born person I've ever seen in a film. When he died in 1939, he was considered a pioneer in the film industry. If online sources are to be believed, he directed the first film released by Universal (1915) one of the, if not the, first motion picture made in Hollywood (1911).
THE HEAD GUY has a nice atmospheric feel to the film with the rain coming down in buckets outside the train station. Eddie Dunn gave a good performance as the dance troupe boss.
The boxing scenes in THE FIGHTING PARSON were clever with the boxing gloves on poles pushed up into Harry's arms. I'm not sure if i've seen that used elsewhere. Someone on Facebook cracked that it amounted to socially distanced boxing.
On the commentary for HOTTER THAN HOT, it's noted that Edith Kramer, aka Jill Dennett, appeared in Men in Black with the Three Stooges. I'm skeptical of that. We don't have her in that film on this site but IMDB has her in Men in White, the 1934 feature. Wires might have been crossed on that one.
Speaking of Jill Dennett, one person posted at NitrateVille last summer and wondered whatever happened to her, if she really died in England in 1941 as IMDB and Wikipedia report. I stumbled onto the post this weekend. My best guess is that she did not die there in 1941- instead, living until a 1969 death in Los Angeles.
More here: https://www.nitrateville.com/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=28570