At least Columbia didn't do to the Stooges what MGM did to poor Buster Keaton when they started putting him in early sound films. No one had thought up the concept of dubbing yet, so he'd film a script in English, then in French, then in Spanish, then in German, playing opposite actors who spoke in those languages. He had to learn each foriegn-language part phonetically, then forget it and go on to the next one. Buster later said that he did okay, but when he'd finished fiming in say, French, and started the German film, the director would complain that he was speaking German with a French accent!
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Laurel and Hardy did this too - before Keaton, so MGM, rathet than accept the immense loss of foreign revenue, must have decided to put Keaton through the same process.
I've seen 4 "foreign" L&H films: the Spanish versions of BLOTTO, THE LAUREL-HARDY MURDER CASE, CHICKENS COME HOME, and PARDON US. The first 2 I have on tape. I've seen clips of Keaton speaking Spanish from the Spanish version of FREE AND EASY.
L&H's Spanish, even to a non-speaker of that language, are terrible - hilariously terrible. (Imagine Stan saying "Ay caramba!"). In all 4 cases the Spanish versions run longer than the US prints, some considerably so. LA VIDA NOCTURNA, the Spanish BLOTTO, runs a good 45 min., almost twice as long as the US release print.
MGM seems to have made a brief practice of remaking some of their films in foreign lang. versions (not just Keaton) during the 1930-31 season, but costs brought this practice to an end. Still it must have been fun for people in spain or Mexico to hear a star like Gable attempt Spanish. In the case of L&H or Keaton, the lousy accents didn't matter so much - it's comedy after all. Dramatic stars, however, were a different story.....
Hal Roach said the returns on these supersized, translated shorts were enormous - they played as features (hence the extra running time) - so Nick Schenck must've believed Buster's returns would've done just as well. And apparently, he wasn't wrong.....