|
![]() |
| Written and filmed June, 1932. Released by
MGM, September,
1932. Produced by Hal Roach. Directed by Raymond McCarey. Two reels.
Cast: Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Vivien Oakland, Rychard Craymer, Arthur Housman. |
STORY: Vagrants L&H are ordered to "Scram!" out of town by an ill-tempered judge. Wandering the rainy streets, they encounter a good-natured drunk who invites them to spend the night at his place. The drunk leads them to the wrong house, where Stan and Ollie help themselves to some silk pajamas and get roaring drunk with the lady of the house. The real owner returns home -- it is the judge, who unleashes his wrath. |
| JL: Far from their best,
but I
like it. Another plot-heavy film, but that's what carries it. Unlike
their
gag-oriented films, you care more about what's going to happen next
than
you do what's happening at the time. This approach doesn't make for the
best Laurel and Hardy, but it does make for an amusing 20
minutes.
Although Rychard Craymer was far from the funniest of their foils, he may have been a more versatile actor. Fin and Charlie Hall are always Fin and Charlie Hall, but Craymer in this film is about as far removed from "Now then, Jitterbugs" (in 1940's SAPS AT SEA) as he can get. It was many years before I realized they were even the same actor, a mistake one would never make with Fin. |
| JB: Jumping the gun a
bit, Craymer
in SAPS AT SEA gives a simply a hilarious
performance,
well worth whatever the price of admission was back then. Funny and
menacing
at the same time. Could anyone else say the word "jitterbugs" with the
same inflection? Walter Long in this role would have been a letdown.
"All
right, you mugs, eat them vittles!" instead of "It looks ssssooo
good....
YOU eat it."
Scram! is on a list of shorts, along with Me and My Pal and Another Fine Mess, that are good, amusing, interesting, but not really top quality. Halfburners, I would call them. Perhaps a they needed a different director, or a few more gags from the minds of the boys, or a different co-star --- these films are missing something. |
Copyright © John Larrabee, John V. Brennan 2003. All Rights Reserved.
![]()