Sing Sister Sing (1935) Poster

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7/10
Todd and Kelly are apartment mates until...
Doylenf30 August 2010
This is one of the better scripted comedy shorts pairing THELMA TODD, blonde and elegant, with short-tempered PATSY KELLY, who is eager to share an apartment suite with her good friend.

Unfortunately, the idea turns sour when Patsy discovers that although she's supposed to share the space equally, it's impossible when Todd's belongings fill up all the allotted space. Furthermore, Todd lets out a panicky scream when Patsy turns the night-table light off when they prepare to sleep.

"I always keep the light on!" declares Todd, much to Kelly's dismay. It turns out that Todd is also a sleepwalker who walks out onto the windowsill in a trance, with Kelly following her to prevent an accident. Naturally, the laughs come as the two struggle with various dangerous predicaments.

It passes the brief time in amusing ways and certainly points up the different acting technique of the two actresses.
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6/10
Kelly has a right to be mad at Todd in this one
Paularoc6 July 2013
Todd invites Kelly to become her room mate at a resident hotel. The thing is, Todd has a long list of rules, like having to sing when one is mad. Although Todd has told Kelly that they will equally share all the space, she has filled up all the closet and drawer space with her own clothes. To Kelly's increase chagrin, Todd has a number of other annoying habits such as insisting a table light be on all during the night. Add to that is Todd's sleepwalking and Kelly's frantic efforts to keep her safe. There are some funny bits, particularly the ones with the Murphy bed and a drunk's mistaking a fire hose for a snake. It's a fun entry in the series in great part because of the change up in the respective roles of Todd and Kelly. In this case it's Todd that causes all the trouble.
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6/10
Better than usual...
planktonrules7 September 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This is an okay comedy short featuring Thelma Todd and Patsy Kelly. However, okay for this team is actually pretty good, as they were clearly the third-rate team from Hal Roach Studios at the time--and generally received scripts that were deemed too poor for Laurel & Hardy or CHarley Chase. I have noticed that some IMDb reviewers like their films, though I have never been bowled over by them and see them as time-passers or worse. What I mean by this is that Patsy's persona in the films is so loud and abrasive, sometimes I feel like throwing something at the TV as I watch--though in some she is, thankfully, a bit more restrained. Here in "Sing, Sister, Sing" she is a bit restrained.

The film has nothing to do with singing but is instead about Patsy moving in with Thelma. For once, Patsy generally stays out of trouble and it's Thelma that has serious problems. It seems that about midway through the film Thelma begins sleepwalking--leading to a rather funny punchline at the end.

While not a great film and certainly NOT one equal to the Laurel & Hardy shorts of the time, this one is decent and good for one or two laughs--but not a lot more.
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Another Nice Entry in the Series
Michael_Elliott6 November 2010
Sing, Sister, Sing (1935)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Another decent entry in Hal Roach's "Girlfriends" series with Patsy Kelly and Thelma Todd. This time out Todd is living in a fancy hotel but she invites Kelly to stay with her. Todd sets down many rules for the place but soon she's breaking all of them and Kelly is taking the heat for it. This isn't the best film in the series but there are enough good moments to make it worth viewing. I'd add that this here is probably one of the most unusual entries in the series because you're really not getting the typical type of humor, which usually depends on Todd doing everything she can to stay out of trouble while Kelly would come along to mess everything up. In this short things are pretty much turned around as it's Todd who is being the annoying one and getting all the trouble started. I think it's a pretty good move by switching things up a bit as we're not left with the same type of humor. Instead we're giving a screenplay that's better written than normal and we get several scenes where the comedy has time to grow instead of just getting one small gag and then off for the next one. The highlight of the film is a scene where the fire hose gets turned on and a drunk walks out of his room and thinks there's a snake loose.
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5/10
As Leader Trump assembles his team of "legal beagles" . . .
tadpole-596-91825627 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
. . . to "Make America Great Again" like in the Good Old Days of Psychiatry's DSM-I, he can probably expect a lawsuit or two from those who want to have their sour grapes, and stomp them, too. However, if He heeds the lesson of The Boiling Frog Pot by erasing the LGBT-Q Faction one letter at a time, America will someday become as purely homogenized as a gallon of milk. When it comes to the L-Word, SING SISTER SING can serve as Exhibit A in the argument for a vanishing act. "Thelma" and "Patsy" demonstrate how "two of a kind demands rewind" throughout SING SISTER SING. These bedmates cannot stand each other, yet they're so wrapped up in their own affair that they jeopardize everyone else who has the misfortune to be around them with their over-stuffed trunks, under-tipping, thrashing hoses, strained signs, Venetian blinding, and so forth. To simply put it in a clam shell, SING SISTER SING shows that productivity plummets drastically and breakage sky-rockets when the spokes are not lined up with the sprockets!
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8/10
Best of the Kelly-Todd Girl Friends
boblipton9 May 2007
This late entry in the 'Girl Friends' series is arguably the best one since Zasu Pitts left the series. I attribute this largely to two factors: a script in which the two ladies' personalities are more clearly differentiated than in other efforts -- Thelma is anal retentive and gets on the nerves of the short-tempered Patsy to highly amusing effect -- and to the superior comedy direction of Paul Parrott, Charley Chase's brother, who directed several of Laurel & Hardy's better shorts and who knew how to use the Roach studio's comedy staff to advantage. It is a pity that he did not stay on, but drug problems that led to his early death meant that he was on the downward slope, and Roach's closing of short subjects production the following year and Thelma Todd's murder put paid to any future.

In the meantime, this fine example of comedy remains. If you have a chance to see it, do so.
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8/10
Plenty of laughs from Patsy and Thelma
Grendel195020 October 2018
One of the better Kelly-Todd entries, this one had no plot at all, just a series of gags dominated by Patsy Kelly. Thelma has little to do but be somewhat annoying, but Jimmy Parrott's direction and the above average gags make this a winner. A good running gag leaves Patsy with nowhere to put her clothes because Thelma's crowd every closet and drawer, to the point of crawling out when they're opened. Charlie Hall and Arthur Houseman get in in the fun, too, and LeRoy Shields' wonderful background themes run throughout the short.
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