Yeah, I’m going to be the dissenter here; I thought that this was a bad movie. I don’t like the set up, the characters are annoying, it’s not funny most of the time and there’s a particularly insulting sequence in the middle. There is one funny sequence here, but we’re getting ahead of ourselves.
Starting with the setup, I think this was handled very poorly. HomokHarcos hits the nail on the head; the fact that this situation is a punishment for Harry is what really makes it intolerable for me. For one thing, they don’t actually show him being a so-called “Chaser” at the beginning. He is at the end, but at the beginning, literally all he does is watch other people doing the thing he’s accused of. That’s it; he’s at this lodge watching others, which is weird, sure, but they’re making all these accusations against him and treat him like he deserves to be punished for these things he didn’t do! The wife and the mother-in-law are incredibly unlikable; I can see what they were going for in having the wife and him reversing roles at the breakfast table, but it doesn’t work because we never saw their life before this. We don’t see Harry acting the same way that Gladys does in the husband role, it just comes across as her treating him like garbage the whole first half. I especially hate the part where she brings all her friends home to show them what she’s done to him; she enjoys seeing him humiliated, it’s really painful to watch.
I didn’t like the egg sequence either; you spend way too much time watching Harry holding what looks like a dead chicken in his hands before getting into this dumb mix up with him thinking he’s laid an egg. Add in another bad sequence with Harry dealing with a guy coming to repossess unpaid objects (during which Harry’s wife yells at him for simply trying to get her approval on the repossession), and you have the build up to the worst scene in the movie...
The suicide scene. Here’s my thing with suicide gags: there’s a right moment and time for it, it has to be handled a certain way for it to work. In cartoons like Looney Tunes, they were generally over exaggerated to a point where there was little to no realism in it. When Keaton and Lloyd did it, it was early on in shorts where their troubles, though bad, were not constantly forced down the audience’s throats. Here, Langdon’s character has literally made headlines, he’s become a poster boy for this dumb punishment and is feeling the wrath of everyone. People constantly treat him terribly, and it gets to a point where it breaks him. This man is falling apart before our very eyes, and they decide this is an appropriate time to do a suicide gag? Making it even worse is that it’s castor oil that he accidentally drinks; it adds insult to injury.
So after that horrendous sequence and a really weird scene with Gladys McConnell crying, we get to the only good part of this movie: the scene with Harry and Bud playing golf. This is the only part of this movie that I laughed at consistently; yeah, Bud has the mustache, but you can’t deny he’s easily recognizable with that scared reaction to the dog digging through the hole. I love seeing him break his clubs in rage, Harry messing around with Bud while he’s stuck in the hole...this is the kind of stuff I wish this movie had more of. But no, instead we follow it with another bad scene where Harry and Bud come across a group of women and Harry basically becomes what everyone at the beginning was saying he was; the whole gag here is that he kisses women and makes them faint. He does it in SOLDIER MAN too, but at the very least the character is his wife in a dream sequence who is attempting to murder him; it comes across as much creepier here.
So in the end we have an unlikable wife, an unlikable husband, a very bad attempt at commentary on gender roles, a horrendous suicide scene, and a few funny moments with Bud Jamison. To me, there’s no question that this is the worst of the Langdon features, far worse than LONG PANTS. If you want to see this idea done better, I would recommend the Goofy cartoon, FATHER’S DAY OFF. Yes, it’s sexist and dated, but so is this movie, and unlike this movie, you have the main character willingly taking on the gender reversal while also managing to stay consistently funny throughout. Maybe Langdon could have pulled this off as a short, but as a feature, this does not hold together at all.