Play It Again Poster Laurel and Hardy

1929 film

Wrong Again
L&H Wrong Again 1929.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed past Leo McCarey
Written past Lewis R. Foster (story)
Leo McCarey (story)
H. M. Walker (intertitles)
Produced past Hal Roach
Starring Stan Laurel
Oliver Hardy
Dell Henderson
Josephine Crowell
William Gillespie
Fred Holmes
Fred Holmes
Sam Lufkin
Harry Bernard
Charlie Hall
Jack Hill
Cinematography Jack Roach
George Stevens
Edited by Richard C. Currier
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Release appointment

  • February 23, 1929 (1929-02-23)

Running time

20:19
Country Usa
Languages Silent film
English (original intertitles)

Wrong Again is a 1929 American two-reel silent comedy film directed by Leo McCarey and starring Laurel and Hardy. It was filmed in October and Nov 1928, and released Feb 23, 1929, past Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Although a silent motion-picture show, it was released with a synchronized music and audio-effects track in theaters equipped for sound.

Plot [edit]

Stable grooms Laurel and Hardy eavesdrop news of a $5,000 reward for the return of the stolen painting The Blue Boy, but call back the reward is for the horse at their barn named Blueish Boy. The police force eventually recover the Blue Boy painting and are making plans to return it. When the grooms bring the equus caballus to the painting's owner, he speaks to them from an upstairs window where he can't see the steed; he tells them to bring Blue Boy into the house.

The three come clumping through the front door while the millionaire upstairs takes a bath. Ollie has an altercation with a nude statue, which snaps into three pieces afterward the two tumble to the flooring; Hardy safeguards the statue's modesty by wrapping its bare trunk in his coat while he reassembles it. When the statue's dorsum upright and Ollie removes the coat, the body segment is backwards, so its backside protrudes out from where its midriff should be.

The millionaire calls down from upstairs, "Put him on summit of the pianoforte". Working together, the boys manage to atomic number 82 the horse over to the grand piano, and upwardly he leaps to his loftier perch. Things seem fine, when of a sudden a pianoforte leg gives way and Ollie is left property things up. During all this, the horse keeps on trying to knock Stan'south hat off, ofttimes succeeding.

The millionaire'south female parent returns home, the police make it with the real Blue Boy, the recovered painting, and the refreshed millionaire descends from his bath, whereupon the misunderstanding is revealed. Ollie apologizes for the "faux pas", and he, Stan and Blue Boy make a jerky exit, followed past the irate millionaire with a shotgun. In the process, the priceless painting gets knocked to the flooring on top of 1 of the detectives.

Cast [edit]

  • Stan Laurel — Stan
  • Oliver Hardy — Ollie
  • Dell Henderson — millionaire
  • Josephine Crowell — millionaire'due south female parent
  • William Gillespie — equus caballus owner
  • Fred Holmes — stableboy
  • Sam Lufkin — Sullivan
  • Harry Bernard — policeman
  • Charlie Hall — neighbor
  • Jack Hill — man on buckboard
  • Fred Kelsey
  • Anders Randolf

Production notes [edit]

Wrong Again contains a sight gag unknown to mod audiences. When the team first bring their equine repast ticket into the firm, Stan lifts the lid off an urn, ties Blue Male child's rein to information technology and drops it on the floor. 1929 audiences would laugh at this, as the insubstantial lid is a visual dead ringer for a equus caballus anchor, an item withal common in 1929. Drivers of horse-fatigued wagons making deliveries would literally "drop anchor" while they ran their delivery into a house; the equus caballus would be discouraged from wandering by the 25-pound weight of the anchor.[ citation needed ] This is not the only appearance of a equus caballus ballast in a Laurel and Hardy film: they too have one at the ready in their Model T in the 1934 brusque Going Farewell-Adieu! to discourage the machine from wandering abroad.

The working championship of Wrong Again was Just the Reverse, a reference to the 180-degree manus-twist gesture that is a running gag throughout the film. Laurel and Hardy historian Randy Skretvedt writes that the gesture was a running gag around the Hal Roach Studios: artistic sparkplug Leo McCarey would remind the writers that a dramatic episode could be infused with one-act by applying only a twist to make it funny. The gesture became a staple of author-to-writer communication around the studio.[i]

The stable scenes were shot at a Los Angeles sports complex, polo field and ranch known as The Uplifters in Rustic Coulee.[1]

Critical response [edit]

Wrong Again is 1 of the several silent Laurel and Hardy short films that were made with a synchronized music and sound furnishings track; afterward its initial theatrical run in 1929, it was rarely seen, and was overshadowed by the audio films. It would eventually be available in a dwelling house-edition 8mm or 16mm flick, and, as such, almost always without its soundtrack.

Critic William K. Everson was amid the get-go to cast a critical heart on the Laurel and Hardy films. Writing of Incorrect Again in 1967, "An off-trounce one-act that tin simply be seen at a disadvantage now in that it was made equally both a silent and limited sound release, and undoubtedly paced for audio. Today [1967] only the silent version survives, and at times seems bad-mannered and unsure of itself. Nevertheless, it has some very funny moments.... There is a semi-surrealistic quality to many of the sight gags in Wrong Again."[two]

Silent film authority Bruce Calvert commented, "This entertaining picture is one of Laurel and Hardy'southward nigh bizarre,"[3] while prolific critic Leslie Halliwell takes the contrary stand: "Pleasing but not very inventive star one-act."[4]

Glenn Mitchell added Incorrect Once more is among the near original Laurel and Hardy comedies, its gags alternately bizarre, risqué and imaginative knockabout.... The best copies of Wrong Again incorporate a restored disc accompaniment from the original release. The skilled orchestral organisation and appropriate sound effects transform the film into a minor masterpiece, reminding mod audiences of the way silent films were presented at their zenith."[5]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Skretvedt, Randy, 1996. Laurel and Hardy: The Magic Behind the Movies. Beverly Hills, CA: Past Times Publishing. ISBN 0-940410-29-10
  2. ^ Everson, William K. (1967). The Films of Laurel and Hardy. Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Printing. ISBN 0-8065-0146-four, p. 76
  3. ^ Calvert, Bruce at Allmovie.com, http://www.allmovie.com/piece of work/137563
  4. ^ Walker, John, ed. (1994). Halliwell's Film Guide. New York: HarperPerennial. ISBN 0-06-273241-2, p. 1329.
  5. ^ Mitchell, Glenn (1995). The Laurel & Hardy Encyclopedia. London: B.T. Batsford Ltd. ISBN0-7134-7711-3. , p. 293

External links [edit]

  • Wrong Again at IMDb
  • Synopsis at AllMovie
  • Wrong Again at Rotten Tomatoes

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrong_Again

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