10/10
Stan, Ollie...and Lou?
20 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
The title of this comedy is based on the situation at the beginning: Stan's boxing match (Ollie is his manager) against Noah Young (the heavy they shared with fellow Hal Roach alumnus Harold Lloyd). In 1927 the American sports loving public was fully aware of what was "the battle of the century". It was a reference to the second boxing match between Gene Tunney and Jack Dempsey (the one that again ended with Tunney's victory, but has lasted in sports controversy because of the notorious "long count" that may have denied Dempsey his victory). The idea of comparing any boxing match that Stan Laurel is in with the likes of one between Tunney and Dempsey is laughable in itself, but it sets the stage here.

John McCabe gave a brief description of the boxing match in his biography MR.LAUREL AND MR. HARDY. But seeing it on the recently restored Video, one can appreciate it all the more. Young is ready for real boxing business, but Stan is all weird business (some at the expense of manager Ollie). After about ten minutes Young sees a chance, and lands one punch, and Stan falls down.

What adds to the comic beginning is that one sees in the nearby bleachers a dozen or so boxing fans. One of them is young - and thinner than he subsequently looked. It's Lou Costello. I don't know if Costello was working alone in Hollywood at the time, or if he knew someone at Roach's studio, but he gives an interesting little performance in a way he never showed in his own comedies with Bud Abbott. He reacts incredulously at the antics of Stan (and Ollie) in the ring - in fact he acts fairly realistically. It is a curious moment in film history, as it unites Stan and Ollie with half of the film comedy team that slightly eclipsed them in the 1940s, and it presents that half in a quieter manner than as the "baaad boy!".

The rest of the film dealt with insurance and pies. Ollie has a real boxing loser, and he has to recoup his financial loss. So he meets Eugene Palette, an insurance salesman, who sells him an accident policy on Stan's life. Now all Ollie has to do is organize some accident. Unfortunate, he's Oliver Hardy, so we know he will keep bungling it (especially when he tries to get Stan to trip on a banana peel). This is the straw that breaks the wrong camel's back. Charlie Hall is delivering pies, and he trips on the peel. He happens to see Ollie trying to hide the tell tale banana peel, so he knows who is responsible. Soon he puts a pie in Hardy's face. But Stan doesn't like that, and he takes a pie and puts it into Hall's face. Soon what McCabe calls "reciprocal destruction" spreads over the street, involving all types of people (including Palette, who tries to use the fight as an opportunity to sell more insurance policies!). The culmination is when Anita Garvin slips on a pie, sitting on it. She does not realize it is a pie, and her embarrassment is priceless.

It was their second film - and it was one of their best ones.
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