Here's a review of a 1999 movie I saw -- but there is still a question I can't answer: where oh where did I get that story about Larry Harmon lending Bronson Pinchot Stan Laurel's shows? Read on:
Who knew there were two mummy movies in 1999?
19
years ago this movie, THE ALL NEW ADVENTURES OF LAUREL AND HARDY IN FOR
LOVE OR MUMMY, with Oscar winner F. Murray Abraham in a supporting
role, came out of the blue. Maybe it played the theatres for a day or a
week, but I never saw it nor heard of it. It popped up on cable some
years later, running regularly in the twilight hours. I watched some of
it. The plot was stunningly bad, but I was fascinated by the two leads.
They did a good pastiche.
Why it seemed like a good idea to do this, I don't know. Bronson Pinchot and Gailard
Sartain star as descendants of the original Laurel and Hardy. They do a
good job of mimicking the comedy duo, but it's like New Coke. Ha ha. Remember New Coke? Do not
want. Do not need. Best left alone, y'know?
I
read a story that Larry Harmon, who managed the Laurel and Hardy
property (he created the animated shorts and comic books in the 1960s),
was a friend to Pinchot. For Pinchot's 1980s PERFECT STRANGERS sitcom,
he (Pinchot) portrayed Stan Laurel in a dream sequence. The story goes
that Harmon loaned Pinchot a pair of Stan Laurel's actual shoes for the
sequence.
Perhaps this movie was, sincerely, a
dream of Pinchot's and Harmon's to create. With Harmon as co-director,
the movie was made, for good or for ill; for love, rather than for money
I would bet. The silver lining of this: Perhaps it has served as an
introduction of the duo to kids.
Here's the trailer for the movie:
Related:
Laurel and Hardy Together Again (a rarely seen 1983 documentary).
"I sure do miss Mr. Hardy," a letter from Stan Laurel to a fan.
-- the above is an edited version of a blog entry from August 10, 2011.
Tuesday, August 21, 2018
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1 comment:
According to "The Laurel and Hardy Scrapbook" (a 1976 book that feels like an ambitious fan project) Larry Harmon's grand vision included a Laurel and Hardy amusement park and an animated feature film. Presumably some Laurel and Hardy pizzerias and pie shops actually opened, but all I ever saw were the cartoons on a local Bozo show and some related merchandise. A redesigned version of the boys appeared in "The New Scooby Doo Movies".
Abbott and Costello, the Three Stooges, Jerry Lewis and Charlie Chaplin had authorized TV cartoons; Bob Clampett worked on a pilot for Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy. But the only other live impersonator project I know of is the theatrical Three Stooges movie (biopics don't count).
The impersonations in the trailer are tempting, but "Oliver THADDEUS Hardy"??? The faithful know it was Oliver Norvell Hardy in real life and at least once onscreen.
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