I received one of those 50 classic DVD movie sets for Father's Day, and I didn't have time to watch them until my vacation last week. It turned out there were four Stooges shorts. If you don't know, my entire family is female; I have my wife Brenda, my 13-year-old daughter Sarah, my 16-year-old cat Velvet, my six-year-old dog Kiki, and two fish, Wanda and Alan (don't ask.)
My wife told me years ago that the Stooges were a "guy thing"; women just don't get them. She grew up with two brothers who made her watch them when they were on tv, so that's where she got her opinion. My bro and I watched them when we were young, but I hadn't really watched any shorts for at least 30 years.
I started by playing the 1936 "Disorder in the Court" with the original lineup of Larry, Moe and Curly, for Sarah (Brenda was indisposed.)
It only took a few minutes before she was smiling and then laughing out loud. By the time they were shooting the "tarantula", Sarah was roaring.
Brenda came out when I started playing the 1947 "Malice in the Palace" with Shemp replacing Curly. Brenda was laughing so hard, I thought she was having a heart attack. When I checked and found that she was actually OK, she informed me that "maybe" she was wrong about the Stooges.
We also watched "Brideless Groom" and "Sing a Song of Six Pants", which have their admirers but I feel aren't quite up to the first two. Anybody have anything to share about these guys. You can count Curly Joe, if you want, since he was basically in all the feature films.
P.S. Remember, I'm a high-class film buff/student/historian who believes in this very-serious art form. Let's try to keep the discussion on a high-brow level. (Right.)
"Naked Woman, Naked Man
Where did you get that nice sun tan?"