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Babes in Toyland

 
Movies:

Babes in Toyland

  • Directors: Gus Meins; Charles Rogers
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Musical
  • Movie Type: Musical Fantasy, Musical Comedy
  • Themes: Fantasy Lands, Unlikely Heroes
  • Main Cast: Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Charlotte Henry, Felix Knight, Henry Kleinbach
  • Release Year: 1934
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 77 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

March of the Wooden Soldiers is the 1952 reissue title for Hal Roach's 1934 film version of Victor Herbert's Babes in Toyland. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy star as Stannie Dum and Ollie Dee, bumbling apprentices to the master toymaker of Toyland. This joyous fairy-tale community is populated by all the colorful Mother Goose characters we know and love; the one sour apple in the barrel is mean old Silas Barnaby (portrayed by Henry Kleinbach, aka Henry Brandon). Barnaby holds the mortgage on the outsized shoe where Widow Peep (Florence Roberts) and her daughter Little Bo Peep (Charlotte Henry) reside, and where Stannie and Ollie pay room and board. Bo Peep will be forced to marry the odious Barnaby if the rent isn't paid, so Stannie and Ollie try to raise the money by asking the toymaker for a raise. But the boys are fired when Stannie messes up an order from Santa Claus: instead of making six hundred toy soldiers one foot high, the dumb Mr. Dum makes one hundred toy soldiers six feet high. The wedding between Barnaby and Bo Peep goes on as planned--except that it's Stannie, disguised as the bride, who ends up walking down the altar. Publicly humiliated, Barnaby vows revenge. He steals one of the Three Little Pigs and places the blame on Bo Peep's boy friend, Tom-Tom the Piper's Son (Felix Knight). The penalty for pignapping is banishment to Bogeyland, a fearsome subterranean world populated by hideous bogeymen (look closely and you'll see the zippers on their costumes!) Stannie and Ollie expose Barnaby's perfidy and rescue Tom-Tom from Bogeyland, whereupon Barnaby rallies the bogeymen and leads an all-out attack on Toyland. Taking refuge in the toy warehouse, Stannie and Ollie activate the 100 6-foot wooden soldiers (a neat bit of stop-motion photography, courtesy of Hal Roach's "fx" wizard Roy Seawright), who vanquish the Bogeymen and save the day. One of the best of all the Laurel and Hardy features, March of the Wooden Soldiers has been a television holiday perennial ever since the cathode tube was invented. Only a handful of Victor Herbert's songs are utilized, but these lilting compositions more than compensate for the omissions (one song, "I Can't Do That Sum", is used as the leitmotif for the clueless Stannie and Ollie). For years available only in the 70-minute reissue version, March of the Wooden Soldiers has recently been fully restored to its full glorious 78 minutes. The parent property Babes in Toyland was remade by Disney in 1961 (with Gene Sheldon and Henry Calvin as Laurel and Hardy wannabes) and for television in 1986, with new songs by Leslie Bricusse. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Marie Wilson - Mary Quite Contrary; Florence Roberts - Mother Peep; Ferdinand Munier - Santa Claus; William Burress - Toymaker; Virginia Karns - Mother Goose; Frank Austin - Justice of the peace; Billy Bletcher - Chief of police; Alice Dahl - Little Miss Muffett; Jean Darling - Curly Locks; Johnny Downs - Little Boy Blue; John George - Barnaby's Minion; Sumner Getchell - Tom Thumb; Gus Leonard - Candle snuffer; Alice Moore - Queen of Hearts; Kewpie Morgan - Old King Cole; Charles "Buddy" Rogers - Simple Simon; Eddie Baker; Alice Cook - Mother Hubbard; Pete Gordon - Cat and the Fiddle

Credit

Gus Meins - Director, Charles Rogers - Director, Bert Jordan - Editor, William Terhune - Editor, Howard Jackson - Musical Direction/Supervision, Harry Jackson - Musical Direction/Supervision, Glen MacDonough - Songwriter, Francis Corby - Cinematographer, Art Lloyd - Cinematographer, Hal Roach - Producer, Frank R. Butler - Screenwriter, Nick Grinde - Screenwriter, Victor Herbert - From Musical by

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Wikipedia: Babes in Toyland (1934 film)
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Babes in Toyland

Theatrical poster (1934)
Directed by Gus Meins
Charley Rogers
Produced by Hal Roach
Written by Frank Butler
Nick Grinde
Victor Herbert (operetta)
Glen MacDonough (operetta)
Hal Roach
Starring Stan Laurel
Oliver Hardy
Music by Frank Churchill
Ann Ronell
Editing by Bert Jordan
William H. Terhune
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) December 14, 1934; re-released 1948
Running time 73 min.
Country  United States
Language English
Preceded by Them Thar Hills
Followed by The Live Ghost

Babes in Toyland is a Laurel and Hardy musical film released in November 1934. The film is also known by its alternate titles Laurel and Hardy in Toyland, Revenge Is Sweet (the 1948 European reissue title), March of the Wooden Soldiers and Wooden Soldiers.

Based on Victor Herbert's popular 1903 operetta Babes in Toyland, the film was produced by Hal Roach, directed by Charles Rogers and Gus Meins, and distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Originally filmed in black-and-white, the film is also shown in two computer colorized versions.[1]

Contents

Plot

Ollie Dee and Stannie Dum

Although the 1934 film makes use of many of the characters in the original play, as well as several of the songs, the plot is almost entirely unlike that of the original stage production. The film's story takes place in Toyland, which is inhabited by Mother Goose and other well known fairy tale characters. Stannie Dum and Ollie Dee (played by Laurel and Hardy, respectively), live in a shoe (as in the nursery rhyme There Was An Old Woman Who Lived In A Shoe), along with Mother Peep (the Old Woman), Little Bo Peep, a mouse resembling Mickey Mouse (and actually played by a live monkey in a costume), and many other children. The mortgage on the shoe is owned by the villainous Silas Barnaby, who is looking to marry Bo Peep. Stannie and Ollie set out to get the money for the mortgage from their boss, The Toymaker. But after the Toymaker finds that Stannie has mixed up an order from Santa Claus (building 100 wooden soldiers at six feet tall, instead of 600 soldiers at one foot tall) and one of the soldiers wrecks the toy shop, Stannie and Ollie are fired without getting the money.

The two then hatch a plan to sneak into Barnaby's house and steal the mortgage, but are again foiled by their incompetence. Barnaby has them arrested on a burglary charge, and the two are sentenced to be dunked in the ducking stool and then banished to Bogeyland. But Barnaby agrees to drop the charges if Little Bo Peep will marry him. She reluctantly agrees, but not before Ollie suffers the humiliation of the dunking.

Stannie and Ollie come up with a new scheme. At the wedding, Ollie is present to give the bride away. After the nuptials, but before the ceremonial kiss, Ollie asks for the "wedding present" (the mortgage) from Barnaby. After inspecting it, Ollie tears it up, and then lifts the bride's veil - to reveal Stannie, who had worn Bo Peep's wedding dress to the ceremony. Bo Peep is still free, and the mortgage is gone. Ollie teases Stan about having to live with Barnaby as Stan cries saying "But I don't LOVE him".

Enraged, Barnaby plots his revenge, eventually hitting on the idea of framing Bo Peep's true love, Tom, Tom, the Piper's Son, on a trumped-up charge of "pignapping", and getting him banished to Bogeyland. Barnaby proceeds to abduct Little Elmer, one of the Three Little Pigs, and then has a henchman plant false evidence (including sausage links) in Tom-Tom's house. Tom-Tom is put on trial, convicted, and banished to Bogeyland, which he is taken to on a raft by two hooded executioners across an alligator infested river. A distraught Bo Peep follows him.

Meanwhile, Ollie and Stannie find evidence implicating Barnaby in the pignapping, including the fact that the alleged sausage links presented as evidence at Tom-Tom's trial were made of beef. They later find the kidnapped pig alive in Barnaby's cellar.

A manhunt commences for Barnaby, who flees to Bogeyland through a secret passageway at the bottom of an empty well. Stannie and Ollie eventually follow Barnaby down the well. Meanwhile, Little Bo Peep crosses the river to Bogeyland, finds Tom-Tom and explains Barnaby's trickery to him.

In a sequence cut from most of the television prints (the version shown on WPIX in New York retains this sequence), Tom-Tom sings a lullaby (Victor Herbert's "Go to Sleep, Slumber Deep") to Little Bo-Peep in an enormous cave set with giant spider webs. Barnaby catches up to Tom-Tom and Bo Peep, and attempts to abduct Bo Peep but gets into a fight with Tom-Tom, who gives Barnaby a well deserved beating.

Pursued by Barnaby, Bo Peep and Tom-Tom escape into the caverns of Bogeyland and run into Stannie and Ollie. The foursome escape back through the well and are welcomed by the town, who now realize Barnaby's treachery. An enraged Barnaby grabs a large stick and beats a stalactite to summon an army of Bogeymen. He leads an invasion of Toyland on a fleet of rafts in a scene reminiscent of the painting of Washington Crossing the Delaware.

Ollie and Stan tell their story to Old King Cole (the King of Toyland) and the townspeople as two Bogeymen scale the wall and open the gate. The crowd flees in panic as the army of torch-wielding Bogeymen attack Toyland. Ollie and Stannie run and hide in the toy shop. There they discover boxes of darts and use them to fight off the Bogeymen. Stan and Ollie then empty an entire box of darts into a cannon, but as the two search for the last remaining darts, they realize instead that they should unleash the wooden soldiers. The "march" alluded to in the film's title begins as the soldiers march out of the toy shop (filmed in a stop-motion animation sequence by Roy Seawright[2]). The scene changes to live action as the soldiers attack the Bogeymen with the bayonets of their rifles. Barnaby and the Bogeymen are defeated and driven back into Bogeyland, where alligators appear to feast on them, although this is never made clear. The kingdom of Toyland is saved. Stan and Ollie decide to give the Bogeymen a parting shot with the dart-filled cannon. As Stan aims the cannon and lights the fuse, and Ollie turns away to avoid the loud blast, the barrel of the cannon flips backwards and unleashes the barrage of darts on Ollie, covering his back with darts. The film ends with Stan pulling them out one by one as Ollie winces.

Cast

Songs

The film featured only five musical numbers from the enormous stage score, though that was fitting for a musical with only a 78-minute running time. Included in the film, in the order in which they were performed, were "Toyland" (opening), "Never Mind Bo-Peep", "Castle in Spain", "Go to Sleep (Slumber Deep)", and "March of the Toys", an instrumental piece. The opening song was performed by Mother Goose; most of the rest were sung/led by Bo Peep and/or Tom-Tom. While none of the songs were performed by Laurel and Hardy, the two briefly danced and marched in a memorable scene to "March of the Toys".

Popularity

1948 re-release poster for Babes in Toyland (1934)

A holiday staple, many television stations in the US showed this film near Thanksgiving time each year during the '60s and '70s. In more recent years, it has been shown in some markets on Christmas Day.

Remakes

A Technicolor version of the operetta was made by Walt Disney in 1961, with many of the same characters, but with an entirely different plot.

Years later, Orion Television (now part of MGM) produced a three-hour (with commercials) television musical remake of the operetta with Drew Barrymore, although her singing voice was dubbed by a vocal double. This version threw out nearly all of the Victor Herbert music, replacing it with songs by Leslie Bricusse.

Alternate versions

In 1950 the 79-minute Babes in Toyland was edited down to a 73-minute version for theatrical reissue, as March of the Wooden Soldiers. For many years most television prints were taken from this abridged edition.

The film was restored and colorized for TV showings and video release in 1991 by The Samuel Goldwyn Company.[3][4] In 2006, the complete print was restored and colorized by Legend Films, using the latest technology.[3][5][6] Although the Legend Films release was advertised under its reissue title, both the color and black and white prints featured the original title and opening credits.[5][7] Both colorized versions correctly depict Stan's hair as being red, not medium brown as it appears in other colorized Laurel and Hardy movies.

The film is in the public domain, and has been distributed by many home video companies over the decades. Thunderbird Films released 16 mm prints in the 1970s drawn from a heavily spliced (and incomplete) master. An "official" version has been released on DVD by MGM, now the ancillary rights holder (having inherited the film from the Samuel Goldwyn Company, the former owners of the picture), and, in a twist of irony, the original producing studio, making this one of the few pre-1986 MGM films that did not end up with Warner Bros./Turner Entertainment.

See also

References

  1. ^ Maltin, Leonard, ed (2007). Leonard Maltin's 2008 Movie Guide. New York: Signet. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-451-22186-5. 
  2. ^ http://theluckycorner.com/crew/seawright.html
  3. ^ a b "Alternate Versions for Babes in Toyland (1934)". Internet Movie Database. http://imdb.com/title/tt0024852/alternateversions. Retrieved 2006-12-25. 
  4. ^ "ASIN: 6303625800". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/6303625800/. Retrieved 2006-12-25. 
  5. ^ a b "The original Babes in colour". Blotto Online. http://www.blotto.nl/index.php/international/the_original_babes_in_colour/. Retrieved 2006-12-25. 
  6. ^ "ASIN: B000HLDFKO". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000HLDFKO/. Retrieved 2006-12-25. 
  7. ^ The trailer for Legend Films' colorized version of the film can be seen here

External links


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