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Big Business

United States

1929

19 Min
Black and White
1.33:1
Silent
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR James W. Horne, Leo McCarey

PROD Hal Roach

SCR H.M. Walker, Leo McCarey

DP George Stevens

CAST Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, James Finlayson, Charlie Hall, Retta Palmer, Tiny Sandford, Lyle Tayo

ED Richard C. Currier

Berlinale (Retrospective)

Synopsis

Stan and Ollie are Christmas tree salesmen in California. Business is slow and a simple argument with one grumpy prospective customer (James Finlayson) escalates from a simple argument into full scale mutual destruction with Stan & Ollie destroying the customers house and garden, whilst Finlayson reduces their car to scrap metal, all under the disbelieving gaze of a police officer and an assembled crowd. –IMDb

Director

Original

Leo McCarey

Los Angeles-born Leo McCarey was, along with Frank Capra, one of the most popular and successful comedy directors of the pre-World War II era. Unlike Capra, however, McCarey’s success endured well after World War II, and like Capra, his work was still influencing filmmakers in the 1990s. Originally an attorney, McCarey entered films by a circuitous route shortly after starting his own practice, beginning as an assistant to Tod Browning. During the 1920s, he went to work for Hal Roach Studios as a gag writer and director and, within two years, was a vice president. It was while at Roach that McCarey teamed Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy together for the first time, thus creating one of the most enduring comedy teams of all time. As a director, he imposed a frantically paced, breakneck speed to comedy which quickly became his trademark in the 1930s. A triple-threat as writer and producer as well as director, McCarey made some of the most inspired comedies of the decade, including The Milky… read more

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AKFilmFan

26Oct11

A great Laurel and Hardy short with an even funnier myth that they demolished the wrong house by accident.

MarcH

24Oct11

The last word in comic timing. Just perfect.

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Roscoe

1Nov10

A masterpiece, one of the funniest of American films.

MarcH likes this

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