LYCOS RETRIEVER
Oliver Hardy: Laurel Hardy
built 631 days ago
Synopsis: Mastered from the original 35mm material, the seventh volume of lost films from the great comedy team of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy is coming to DVD. This volume includes Unaccustomed As We Are: Talking Version (1929, 21 minutes), Should Married Men Go Home (1928, 21 minutes, silent), Sailors Beware (1927, 25 minutes, silent), Double Whoopee: Talking Version (1929, 19 minutes), Mixed Nuts (1934, 18 minutes) and With Love and Hisses (1927, 23 minutes, silent).
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Synopsis: Two-reel comedy favorites Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy made their feature-film debut (excluding their guest appearances in Hollywood Revue of 1929 and Rogue Song) in the prison comedy Pardon Us. A spoof of MGM's The Big House, the story begins when erstwhile bootleggers Laurel and Hardy sell aRead More
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Synopsis: In "Leave 'Em Laughing," Stan Laurel has a late-night toothache, but Oliver Hardy seems to do all the suffering. In the morning the boys go to the dentist, a man who apparently ran a torture chamber in a prior lifetime. The pliers-wielding dentist finally gets his patient into the chair, except he takes Hardy's tooth and gives the boys a hearty dose of laughing gas.
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In 'The Laurel - Hardy Murder Case' Ollie comes across an advertisement for the heirs of Eberneezer Laurel. In 'Oliver The Eighth' Stan and Ollie help to find a rich widow a husband.
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This scene from the Flying Deuces features the comedy team of Laurel and Hardy. When they decide to leave the Foreign Legion, they discover it's not that easy. It's nothing but laughs as the duo tries to make their big escape.
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Together Laurel and Hardy were so appealing that the studio launched a new series of short comedies advertised as "Laurel and Hardy" films. The first, The Second Hundred Years, appeared in 1927.
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