(1937)

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7/10
Canopies or can of peas?
mark.waltz10 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Two bumbling reporters (Monte Collins and Tom Kennedy) of questionable experience are assigned to get pictures of a visiting prince engaged to a local heiress, and completely turn the mansion upside down. Lots of funny visuals for Collins and Kennedy who couldn't pluck a turkey if it was a map of the country with feathers covering it. Harry Semels is the not very romantic looking prince and veteran character actress Clara Kimball Young is the widowed socialite, so it's very clear in 1937 historical terms why the prince wants to marry her. I hadn't liked the few Kennedy and Collins shorts I've seen, but this one is quite funny, something I'm sure I've seen done similarly expanded as a feature.
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10/10
Another gem from the Monte Collins/Tom Kennedy comedy team
django-120 February 2005
I'm glad that Jules White (comedy short head-honcho at Columbia) believed in writer/comedian Monte Collins, giving him roles wherever he could. The rubber-faced Collins (whose looks remind me of Jim Varney) is great at playing an exasperated or overly eager character, and he meshes well with the lumbering, dim-witted character played by Tom Kennedy (see my review of FREE RENT). In this short, they are laundry workers who are mistaken for newspaper reporters, and then assigned to go undercover and get pictures of a society party. They pose as cooks/servants, and get into the swank affair, and of course they mess up everything AND they discover that everything is not what it seems. This plot and these characters seem familiar--was this short later re-tooled for The Three Stooges? or was the Stooges short the original? Perhaps Bud Jamison was also the head butler in the Stooge version as he is here? In any event, NEW NEWS is the perfect Columbia short with wild physical slapstick, goofy situations and characters, and hilarious problems with food and machinery. If you like the fast pace and reckless abandon of a Columbia comedy short, check out this example of the comic wizardry of Collins and Kennedy. Wouldn't it be great if we could see this kind of thing on television?
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