Silent Films:

pre-team 1921-1927

Laurel and Hardy Silents 1927

Laurel and Hardy Silents 1928

Laurel and Hardy Silents 1929



Laurel and Hardy sound films
(alphabetical order):


A-Haunting We Will Go

Air Raid Wardens

Another Fine Mess

Any Old Port!

Atoll K (aka Utopia)

Babes In Toyland

Beau Hunks

Be Big!

Below Zero

Berth Marks

The Big Noise

Block-Heads

Blotto

The Bohemian Girl

Bonnie Scotland

Brats

The Bullfighters

Busy Bodies

Chickens Come Home -

The Chimp

A Chump At Oxford

Come Clean

County Hospital

The Dancing Masters

The Devil's Brother aka Fra Diavolo

Dirty Work

The Fixer Uppers

The Flying Deuces

Fra Diavolo aka The Devil's Brother

Going Bye-Bye!

Great Guns

Helpmates

Hog Wild

The Hoose-Gow

Jitterbugs

Laughing Gravy

The Laurel-Hardy Murder Case

The Live Ghost

Me And My Pal

Men O'War

The Midnight Patrol

The Music Box

Night Owls

Nothing But Trouble

Oliver The Eighth

One Good Turn

Our Relations

Our Wife

Pack Up Your Troubles

Pardon Us

Perfect Day

Saps At Sea

Scram!

Sons of the Desert

Swiss Miss

Their First Mistake

Them Thar Hills

They Go Boom!

Thicker Than Water

Tit For Tat

Towed In A Hole

Twice Two

Unaccustomed As We Are

Utopia (aka Atoll K)

Way Out West



Specials:

Cameos

Cartoons

For Love Or Mummy

Laurel and Hardy Memories

"Stan"

Air Raid Wardens

Year: 1943
Written by: Martin Rackman, Jack Jevne, Charles Rogers and Harry Crane
Directed by: Edward Sedgwick
Duration: 67m
Availability (NTSC only): Try amazon

Viewpoint:
An unashamedly jingoistic Laurel and Hardy movie that sees them try to join the war effort. Watching loveable everymen Stan and Ollie put up signs saying "gone to fight the Japs" troubles me ideologically. Maybe I’m reading into it too much, but seeing such crass propaganda as Ollie saying, "There’s a job to be done right here at home" fills me with a sense of dread. And it’s weird hearing English Stan talking about "Our Country" and uttering such trite platitudes as "We’ll do anything that Uncle Sam wants us to do, won’t we, Ollie?"

What’s most unsettling is that Stan and Ollie look so old and ill you no longer laugh at their slapstick but fear for their safety. Direction by Edward Sedgwick is quite nice in terms of angles and camera motion, but completely at odds with the material. More to the point, sometimes poor shots and editing made the old Laurel and Hardy films funnier. With more professional standards they seem like an anachronism. The tiredness of the two leads (Stan in particular, who liked to be more involved in the creative level) comes through, and it all has a jaded, rehashed feel. I laughed just four times in the film’s 64m duration, and while I cannot imagine any L & H vehicle plumbing the depths of a * movie [Obviously I'd written this before I saw Utopia], this is easily the weakest of their work that I’ve seen so far.

There’s a lifeless atmosphere throughout, and Stan and Ollie’s rapport is virtually non-existent for once. Some bits, like Stan sleeping in a gas mask amuse, but the chemistry is almost entirely absent. If they’d made the film half the length yet with the same material it might have meant a pacier, snappier, product. In fact, it took me a while to put my finger on it, but what the picture misses more than anything else is incidental music, something that was synonymous with Laurel and Hardy. Their violent fight with an awkward houseowner – including ramming a pipe down his throat and smashing his head into a fusebox – does recapture some old glories, but it’s too little. Most unsettling scene is the one where Stan can't write his own name. Laurel & Hardy are always dumb, but here it's supposed to be funny that they have learning difficulties? The climactic final pay-off is particularly notable for being nowhere near good enough. The film doesn’t so much end, but slump to a halt.

Intriguingly, when Air Raid Wardens was released with Nothing But Trouble on one tape in 1993, the blurb on the back told you the ending. How thoughtful.