Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1937


Goofs and Saddles

Buy Goofs and Saddles now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'Goofs and Saddles' is a 1937 American Western short subject film directed by Del Lord and starring the slapstick comedy team The Three Stooges (Moe Howard, Larry Fine and Curly Howard). It is the 24th entry in the series released by Columbia Pictures starring the comedians, who released 190 shorts for the studio between 1934 and 1959.

Plot



Set in the Old West, the Stooges are scouts for the United States Cavalry. They are sent by General Muster (Ted Lorch) to catch a gang of cattle rustlers, so they hide as bushes to try to find the gang's leader, Longhorn Pete (Stanley Blystone). However, the rustlers see past their disguises and shoot at the trio, forcing them to flee. The Stooges eventually wind up in Longhorn Pete's saloon, and the Stooges disguise themselves as gamblers and get into a card game with Pete as they wait for the cavalry.

Moe attempts to send a message to General Muster for help via carrier pigeon, but the pigeon returns to Pete, who reads the incriminating message aloud. The Stooges are forced to escape for their lives, jumping on a covered wagon filled with household equipment and a monkey. The trio toss pots and pans from the wagon onto the ground, which the hoofs of the rustlers' horses catch them. The wagon loosens up from the horse team, and goes down in its own power until it stops.

The Stooges lock themselves within a small house, forcing the rustlers to use their guns on it from the outside. A bullet knocks off the monkey's hat, and he is forced to use a dipper as a helmet. Amidst the melee, Curly spots a meat grinder and decides to make a hamburger. The whizzing bullets accidentally topple a box of ammunition into the grinder, and the grinder becomes a makeshift Gatling gun. Discovering the chance, they add more ammunition and even a gun belt serving as an ad hoc ammunition belt. The increase in opposing firepower overwhelm the bandits until General Muster and his soldiers arrive and capture them. As the Stooges are given kudos for a job well done, the monkey goes to the grinder and twists the handle, firing a few shots that caused the three to be hit and flee the area.

Cast



Credited

* Moe Howard as Wild Bill Hiccup

* Larry Fine as Just Plain Bill

* Curly Howard as Buffalo Billious[https://threestooges.net/filmography/episode/24 'Goofs and Saddles' at threestooges.net]

Uncredited

* Stanley Blystone as Longhorn Pete

* Ted Lorch as General Muster

* Ethan Laidlaw as Tex

* Hank Mann as Lem

* Sam Lufkin as Colonel

* Eddie Laughton as Bartender

* Lew Davis, William Irving as Poker players

* Cy Schindell, Hank Bell, Blackie Whiteford, Jerome "Blackjack" Ward as gang members

* Ethelreda Leopold, Eve Reynolds, Elaine Waters as saloon girls

Production notes



The title 'Goofs and Saddles' is a spoof of the term "hooves and saddles". Filming was completed on April 1419, 1937.

The Stooges' names in this short are Buffalo Billious (Curly), Wild Bill Hiccup (Moe), and Just Plain Bill (Larry). The cultural references are to, respectively, American Old West figures Buffalo Bill and Wild Bill Hickok, and 'Just Plain Bill', an iconic radio soap opera of the era.

The chase sequence on horseback would be recycled in 1954's 'Pals and Gals'.

This short has the smallest slap count. Moe smacks Curly softly on his head and he slaps Larry when he thought Larry pulled them off the horses after hitting a tree branch.

References




Buy Goofs and Saddles now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1937



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1106091548.