Double Whoopee

1929
6.9| 0h19m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 18 May 1929 Released
Producted By: Hal Roach Studios
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Stan and Ollie wreak havoc at an upper class hotel in their jobs as footman (Hardy) and doorman (Laurel). They partially undress blonde bombshell Jean Harlow (in a brief appearance) and repeatedly escort a stuffy nobleman into an empty elevator shaft.

Genre

Comedy

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Director

Lewis R. Foster

Production Companies

Hal Roach Studios

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Double Whoopee Audience Reviews

Odelecol Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.
FuzzyTagz If the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.
Allison Davies The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
Quiet Muffin This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.
Leofwine_draca DOUBLE WHOOPEE is one of the last silent Laurel & Hardy shorts made before the advent of the talkie era. This one sees the pair taking up employment as doormen at a swanky hotel, where they fall foul of European royalty as well as glamorous actresses, policemen and irate staff members.This short is effectively a tribute to the silent film era and there's much to recommend it, from the Eric Von Stroheim impersonator to the early appearance of Jean Harlow who's accidentally stripped by a clumsy Laurel. The focus of the short is inevitably on the slapstick, with characters blundering into accidents and a descent into farce as the duo's antics lead to widespread brawling.As ever with these silent efforts, I miss hearing the sound of the famous pair, but DOUBLE WHOOPEE is good enough to make you forget the shortcomings of the era. It's also distinctive enough to be a worthwhile watch, even if it isn't one of their best works.
tavm I just rewatched two versions of this Laurel & Hardy comedy short: the original silent one on YouTube with an organ score and the sound-dubbed one on VHS with Chuck McCann providing the voices from a script (of which one of the lines is perhaps one of the earliest instances of Ollie saying "Here's another nice mess you've gotten me into") by Al Kilgore mostly matching the lip movements of the players and music provided by Miles Kreuger (with of course Marvin Hatley's L & H theme of "The Cuckoo Song" mixed in). Both are pretty hilarious whichever version you watch especially when the tit-for-tat shenanigans come in. And what a great scene when the about-to-become-legendary star Jean Harlow makes her appearance and then has her dignity almost shattered! Actually, her first take was supposedly even more revealing but I've yet to see any evidence of that. Oh well! Unlike later entries when Stan usually accepts some of Ollie's abuse, he gives it as well here which is often refreshing to see. Also providing a good turn is usual L & H nemesis Charlie Hall as a taxi driver who gets more than enough of Ollie's whistle. I also liked Tiny Sandford as a policeman and especially Captain John Peters as the von Stroheim-like Prince who was actually his double in his movies. About the voices: Chuck got Mr. Laurel's right but is a bit off concerning both Mr. Hall's and Mr. Hardy's, especially concerning the latter's laugh. Still, like I said, both versions of Double Whoopee is highly recommended.
theowinthrop "Double Whoopie" is recalled because it was one of two films where Jean Harlow and Laurel & Hardy crossed paths (the other was "Bacon Grabbers"). It was only one sequence but it is done so perfectly that it remains memorable to this day. We are at a great city hotel, and they are expecting a leading European prince and his party. They are also expecting a new doorman and groom. Enter Ollie, grandly dressed in his doorman's uniform (which is, of course, identical to a royal prince's uniform). He is treated like the great man he has always seen himself as - although he does not deserve to be a great man. Ollie only reveals his real identity when he signs the guest book (his hand exercise in the air is similar to what Art Carney would do years later on "The Honeymooners" when limbering up). Quickly disabused of their error, Ollie and Stan are told to go to their posts.Most people looking at "Double Whoopie" today see the spoofing (by Hans Joby) of Von Stroheim's persona in "Foolish Wives", complete with mile long cigarette holder and monocle. They fail to see that Hardy's doorman is also based on another character: Emil Jannings doorman in "The Last Laugh", who is treated with respect because of his uniform, and is stripped of his self-dignity when he is demoted and loses his uniform. Ollie is not stripped, but he certainly is put in his subservient place quickly.Joby arrives, and has a series of increasingly aggravating mishaps concerning his use of the elevator, which Stan or Ollie take over causing Joby to fall again and again into the shaft (dirtying all of his fine apparel. This gradually leads him to threaten war! But he is not the only one who crosses the boys. There is Charlie Hall, one of their best perennial foes. Charlie is a cab driver, and several times Stan blows Ollie's cab signaling whistle, causing Charlie to pull into the hotel's driveway, and putting on his cab meter. Of course, when Ollie tries to explain it wasn't him, Charlie does not believe it, and increasing threatens to break his neck. A limo pulls up, and out steps the beautiful Harlean Carpenter (a.k.a. Jean Harlow). As this is a silent short film, her plebeian, nasal voice is not evident. We can fully believe her a socialite. Snobby, she fully accepts Ollie's grand manner of welcoming her and accompanying her to the front desk. Neither is aware (nor are the people in the lobby) that Stan, in shutting the car door, causes it to close on her gown, so she is walking in her slip. Eventually she is aware of what has happened, and runs out. By the way, that is the total sequence of Harlow in the film - about a minute and a half.Others get pulled into the increasing crescendo of errors and blunders, including one unfortunate gentleman whose shirt is ripped off by Stan, and who subsequently also has a mustard plaster ripped off painfully by Stan. By the time the film is over there are people chasing people (including policeman Tiny Sandford after a frightened Charlie Hall) throughout the lobby - just as the boys leave, looking thoroughly disappointed at the behavior of everyone around them.It is a wonderful little comedy or ever increasing disaster on disaster. If Harlow does not get as much time as one wants, while unfortunate, it is just as well that her footage is so good.Ironically, although MGM did have distribution rights to Laurel & Hardy's work with Hal Roach (and they did appear in some MGM performances in the 1930s), they never made a sound film with Harlow. But they almost did. In 1934 Laurel & Hardy appeared in the film "Hollywood Party", where they had a memorable sequence with Lupe Velez regarding breaking eggs. The film had originally been planned to have a musical score by Rodgers and Hart, and was to have many first rank stars in it, including Harlow as a telephone operator in a movie studio who dreams of becoming a star. But the plans were dropped, and the final movie was not what at all like the original idea. Still Harlow never fully left the boys' film world. In "Beau Hunks", Hardy joins the French Foreign Legion to forget the woman he loves (Jean Harlow). He looks sadly at her photograph several times. Imagine his chagrin when he finds that most of the other legionnaires also joined to forget her...and that the leader of the Riffs also has a sad crush on Harlow!
sweetnlowdown2 When I first saw this short to be truthful I didn't like. It's not that I don't like Laurel & Hardy's comedy style, I think they are the greatest comedy team in history, but, something about the material didn't seem correct to me. It didn't play off as well as other Laurel & Hardy shorts. Right now I'm thinking of "The Music Box", "Brats", "Going Bye-Bye!" & "County Hospital". I also felt that the timing was missing. Well, I watched it one more time. I now feel I made a misjudgment. I can see now that there does seem to be some chemistry. The next short after this one would be "Berth Marks". I felt that "Marks" was sort of the one that "seal the deal". When the team became the two guys we expect them to be. "Double Whoopee" has "the boys" working in a hotel as a doorman and a footman. It just so happens that a prince is coming to the hotel that same day. A lot of mishaps happen. And the piece does have some laughs. I do not feel this is their best effort. But, is nice to add to one's collection of Laurel & Hardy movies. I would mostly recommend this to people who are already fans. "Double Whoopee" is noted for having a young Jean Harlow in it. And even she gets the Laurel & Hardy treatment. I managed to see this on the dvd "The Lost Films Of Laurel & Hardy Vol. 7" the version shown on there is not silent. It has been dubbed. Laurel & Hardy's voices ARE NOT heard on it. Many may find this to be annoying. But, if you can endure it I think you'll be pleased with it. Also of note is the fact that this was the last obscure Laurel & Hardy piece. After this one everything the team made is one all of their fans have seen. *** out of ****