I'm 19. I was introduced to the boys at ten (through this very film) and loved them instantly. The combination of wisecracks and slapstick routines, timed too slickly for words and enrichened by the humanity behind all madcap comedy, made me both laugh at the boys till my cheekbones hurt and care about them at the same time. The very sight of them makes me chuckle: Laurel sit down at the glasses of Hardy. Hardy stares at him, exasperatedly patient, doing dead takes into the camera while shaking his head. Laurel's reaction is expressed through disintergrated movements with his hands in the manner of a child, trying to calculate what had just occured in bewildered mystification; and then, the embarrassment of the situation is highlighted with Hardy's sudden attack of violent anger. Okay, so I just made this scene up (although Laurel did sit on Hardy's glasses at one point), but what I tried to do was to formulate the essence of their comedy and that their characters are even more significant to their comedy as the very material they perform. But I guess you already knew that.
reply
share