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Why Girls Love Sailors

 
Movies:

Why Girls Love Sailors

  • Director: Fred Guiol
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Farce, Slapstick
  • Themes: Kidnapping, Assumed Identities, Gender-Bending
  • Release Year: 1927
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 21 minutes

Plot

Although Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy both appear in this two-reel short, it's not a Laurel and Hardy film in the true sense of the term. The boys were still a few films away from officially becoming a team. This comedy is primarily Stan's film. As fisherman Willie Brisling, he is engaged to pretty Nelly (Viola Richard), who is kidnapped by her ex-boyfriend, a sea captain (Malcolm Waite). Willie chases after them and is able to sneak on board by disguising himself as a woman. Dressed in drag, he knocks the crew out cold, including the mate (Hardy). While he heads for the captain's quarters, the mate wakes up and grabs a woman's leg -- it belongs to the captain's wife (Anita Garvin). She storms into the captain's cabin to find him with a woman (who, of course, is Willie). Willie manages to rescue Nelly and they dash off while a gunshot infers that the jealous wife has shot the captain. This film was thought lost until a French copy emerged in 1985. While it has its moments, it is not one of Laurel or Hardy's finest moments. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

Cast

Anita Garvin - Captain's Wife; Oliver Hardy - Second Mate; Malcolm Waite - Sea Captain; Stan Laurel - Willie Smelt

Credit

Fred Guiol - Director, Hal Roach - Producer, Hal Roach - Screenwriter
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Why Girls Love Sailors

Theatrical poster for Why Girls Love Sailors (1927)
Directed by Fred Guiol
Produced by Hal Roach
Written by Hal Roach
H.M. Walker (titles)
Starring Stan Laurel
Oliver Hardy
Viola Richard
Anita Garvin
Malcolm Waite
Distributed by Pathé
Release date(s) July 17, 1927
Running time 20 min.
Country  United States
Language Silent film
English intertitles
Preceded by Love 'em and Weep
Followed by With Love and Hisses

Why Girls Love Sailors is a 1927 comedy short silent film directed by Fred Guiol for Hal Roach Studios starring Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy before they had become the comedy team of Laurel and Hardy. It was shot during February 1927 and released July 17, 1927, by Pathé Exchange. It was considered a lost film until the 1980s.

Contents

Opening Title

The crew of the 'Merry Maiden' feared nothing on earth — except the police.

Plot

The film starts with the loading of a ship called the Merry Maiden. Oliver is first mate on the ship and described as "a bully, the nastiest crew member, after the captain of course". Stan plays Willie Brisling a guy who is engaged to Nelly and they are in love. The captain leaves his ship, he sees Nelly and decides he wants her. Stan has a tattoo of a ship on his chest and shows it to the captain. The captain pours a jug of water down Stan's sweater and abducts Nelly. The captain takes Nelly to his ship and Stan sneaks on board to rescue her. Oliver starts to look for Stan. Stan decides to save Nelly his last hope is to get rid of the crew, one by one. Stan disguises himself as a loose woman. The crew begin to fall for his charms. Stan calls one of the crewmen over, he hits the crewman with a cosh and knocks him out. Then he throws the cosh at Oliver, who thinks the crewman threw the cosh. Oliver throws the crewman overboard, this is repeated until all of the crew are in the sea.

Nelly is being harassed by the captain. The captain's wife appears at the ship. The Captain takes a fancy to Stan. The wife appears as Stan is sat in the captain's lap. The captain's wife takes a gun and goes to shoot her husband. Stan stops her and takes off his wig. Stan says "this was a test to see if you really love your husband". The captain and wife begin to make up. But then the captain indicates he's going to "deal with Stan later". Stan is peeved, he opens the door and Nelly appears. Stan indicates the captain has been up to no good with Nelly and that four other loose women have already gone. The captain's wife is furious, Stan gives her the gun back. Stan and Nelly leave. There is a gun shot in the room. The wife, still angry, sees Stan and Nelly through a porthole and shoots them. Stan and Nelly's clothes fall off revealing their underwear.

Cast

Rediscovery of film in the 1980s

After its initial run in 1927 — and particularly after talkies eclipsed silent films' marketability — Why Girls Love Sailors was put in a film can and went missing (Stateside) for nearly fifty years. But the Cinémathèque Française had a 16mm print deep within its vaults, and French film critic Roland Lacourbe saw it in 1971 — and pronounced it "mediocre." It took fifteen more years and the efforts of L&H questors from California, France and Copenhagen to overcome the Cinémathèque's colossal bureaucratic red tape and get a video transfer made from the Cinémathèque's print.[1]

Laurel and Hardy author Glenn Mitchell is even less impressed by the film than was Lacourbe: "Why Girls Love Sailors is one of several instances where the status of a 'lost' film has been reduced by its rediscovery," he writes.[2]

It is available on VHS and DVD releases, with reconstructed credits. In the United States, both VHS and DVD editions are out-of-print.

Miscellany

  • Oliver has a beard and a moustache, rather than his usual solitary moustache.
  • In later years, Oliver Hardy claimed he originated his signature "tie-twiddle" in this film, except he doesn't wear a tie in it; he was probably thinking of Sailors Beware, a film he made some two months later.[3]
  • The film marks the first appearance of Anita Garvin in a Laurel & Hardy picture; her involvement in the film wasn't known for over fifty years, until the 1986 rediscovery.
  • Deleted scenes from this film included actress Anna May Wong.

See also

References

  1. ^ Skretvedt, Randy (1996). Laurel and Hardy: The Magic Behind the Movies. Beverly Hills, CA: Past Times Publishing. ISBN 094041029X, p. 81.
  2. ^ Mitchell, Glenn (1995). The Laurel & Hardy Encyclopedia. London: Batsford, Ltd. ISBN 0713477113, p.289.
  3. ^ Mitchell, Glenn (1995). The Laurel & Hardy Encyclopedia. London: Batsford, Ltd. ISBN 0713477113, p.289.

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