Two Tars: Difference between revisions
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Laurel and Hardy play two sailors on shore leave who decide to rent an automobile. With Laurel at the wheel, he nearly crashes the car into a pedestrian at a street corner. Hardy apologizes for Stan's poor driving, takes the wheel, and shortly thereafter crashes the car into a lamppost. Chagrined, Hardy drives off and parks in front of a drugstore where two young ladies are having difficulty with a street-side vending machine that has taken their penny without giving them a gumball. Hardy tries to shake a gumball from the dispenser but only ends up breaking the glass container, scattering gumballs all over the sidewalk. |
Laurel and Hardy play two sailors on shore leave who decide to rent an automobile. With Laurel at the wheel, he nearly crashes the car into a pedestrian at a street corner. Hardy apologizes for Stan's poor driving, takes the wheel, and shortly thereafter crashes the car into a lamppost. Chagrined, Hardy drives off and parks in front of a drugstore where two young ladies are having difficulty with a street-side vending machine that has taken their penny without giving them a gumball. Hardy tries to shake a gumball from the dispenser but only ends up breaking the glass container, scattering gumballs all over the sidewalk. |
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Seeing this, the angry proprietor confronts Hardy with Stan joining in, constantly slipping on the scattered gumballs. The |
Seeing this, the angry proprietor confronts Hardy with Stan joining in, constantly slipping on the scattered gumballs. The quartet escape to the open road,but not for long. |
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As film scholar William Everson said----"Road repairs have caused a massive traffic tie-up. Tempers have already reached the breaking point, and Hardy's arrival is not welcomed" |
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Accidental bumping of Edgar Kennedy's car escalates into all-out "reciprocal destruction" war between dozens of motorists. When they aren't |
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ripping vital parts off each other's cars, grease guns and overripe tomatoes make effective secondary weapons. When a policeman finally arrives, a steamroller flattens his motorcycle. |
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Stan and Ollie use this distraction to make their escape----into a train tunnel. Their own car joins the pile of undriveable wrecks they have left behind them. |
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==Cast== |
==Cast== |
Revision as of 19:58, 20 June 2023
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (March 2013) |
Two Tars | |
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Directed by | James Parrott |
Written by | Leo McCarey (story) H.M. Walker (titles) |
Produced by | Hal Roach |
Starring | |
Cinematography | George Stevens |
Edited by | Richard C. Currier |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
|
Running time | 21 min. |
Country | United States |
Languages | Silent film English (Original intertitles) |
Two Tars is a silent short subject directed by James Parrott starring comedy duo Laurel and Hardy. It was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer on November 3, 1928
Plot
Laurel and Hardy play two sailors on shore leave who decide to rent an automobile. With Laurel at the wheel, he nearly crashes the car into a pedestrian at a street corner. Hardy apologizes for Stan's poor driving, takes the wheel, and shortly thereafter crashes the car into a lamppost. Chagrined, Hardy drives off and parks in front of a drugstore where two young ladies are having difficulty with a street-side vending machine that has taken their penny without giving them a gumball. Hardy tries to shake a gumball from the dispenser but only ends up breaking the glass container, scattering gumballs all over the sidewalk.
Seeing this, the angry proprietor confronts Hardy with Stan joining in, constantly slipping on the scattered gumballs. The quartet escape to the open road,but not for long.
As film scholar William Everson said----"Road repairs have caused a massive traffic tie-up. Tempers have already reached the breaking point, and Hardy's arrival is not welcomed"
Accidental bumping of Edgar Kennedy's car escalates into all-out "reciprocal destruction" war between dozens of motorists. When they aren't ripping vital parts off each other's cars, grease guns and overripe tomatoes make effective secondary weapons. When a policeman finally arrives, a steamroller flattens his motorcycle.
Stan and Ollie use this distraction to make their escape----into a train tunnel. Their own car joins the pile of undriveable wrecks they have left behind them.
Cast
- Stan Laurel - Stan
- Oliver Hardy - Ollie
- Edgar Kennedy - Motorist
- Thelma Hill - Brunette girl
- Ruby Blaine - Blonde girl
- Harry Bernard - Truck driver
- Chet Brandenburg - Motorist
- Baldwin Cooke - Motorist
- Edgar Dearing - Motorcycle policeman
- Frank Ellis - Motorist
- Helen Gilmore - Motorist
- Clara Guiol - Motorist
- Charlie Hall -Shopkeeper
- Jack Hill - Motorist with mattress
- Fred Holmes - Motorist
- Ham Kinsey
- Sam Lufkin
- Charles McMurphy
- Retta Palmer
- Lon Poff
- Thomas Benton Roberts
- Charley Rogers
- George Rowe
- Lyle Tayo
Production
One of the most elaborate silent comedy shorts, Two Tars was filmed as a three reel (30-minute) comedy originally called Two Tough Tars and edited down to 20 minutes. The opening scenes were shot on Main Street in Culver City, and the car battle scenes were filmed in Santa Monica along what is now Centinela Avenue.
Sons of the Desert
Chapters — called Tents — of The Sons of the Desert, the international Laurel and Hardy Appreciation Society, all take their names from L&H films. There are four Two Tars Tents in Solingen, Germany; Guernsey, Channel Islands; North Illinois/Wisconsin Border; and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A fifth Two Tars Tent was established in Reidsville, North Carolina, but is no longer active.
References
External links
- Two Tars at IMDb
- Two Tars at AllMovie
- Two Tars at the TCM Movie Database
- Two Tars at Rotten Tomatoes
- 1928 films
- 1928 comedy films
- American silent short films
- American black-and-white films
- Films directed by James Parrott
- Laurel and Hardy (film series)
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer short films
- Films with screenplays by H. M. Walker
- 1928 short films
- American comedy short films
- 1920s American films
- Silent American comedy films