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Friday, February 1, 2019

Stan & Ollie

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Stan & Ollie is a weird movie.  There are several reasons for this but the biggest might be how dead on Steve Coogan (Night at the Museums) and John C. Reilly (The River Wild) play the famous comedians.  I really forgot I was watching two actors pretending to be other people and fully accepted what was presented to me without hesitation.

And their charm sucks you in immediately.  The picture starts with the team in their dressing room just bullshitting about ex-wives, how much trouble they’ve caused them and having a few laughs.  Then they get up and take the lengthy walk to the soundstage where they’re getting ready to film the dance scene in Way Out West (which this movie fetishizes the shit out of and ends up showcasing three fucking times throughout, I’ll never understand some fans obsession with it).  Along the way Ollie tries to get Stan to come with him on a trip to Tijuana and Stan makes cracks like “I’m never marrying again.  I’m just gonna find a woman I don’t like and buy her a house.”  You know, real slice of life type shit.

This shot from the dressing room to the set is done in one very long take, or it appears to be, either way it’s impressive as hell.  The backlot is bustling with activity as everyone’s either hauling props, scurrying off to shoot or taking a break in between scenes.  The camera keeps moving from behind Stan and Ollie to the side and in front and all around.  And it’s so elegantly done with the boys playfully chatting away and giving their hellos to passersby that it looks effortless when you know it must’ve been a goddamn nightmare to get right.  If this first seven or eight minutes were it, just a short, it would be incredible and even magical how the filmmakers were able to recreate such a specific mood and actually nail the characters.

However, some people thought there was a full fledged movie here.  And that’s probably the next weirdest thing, there’s no story.  At the end of their career in the early fifties Laurel and Hardy embark on a UK tour putting on live comedy shows.  At first the theaters are only half full but by the end they’re selling out several thousand seat venues.  The thing is they don’t have to overcome some challenge to rise to a high level of notoriety and acclaim again.  It happens because the boys do some extra publicity for the media, word of mouth eventually gets around and once folks find out about the shows they want in.

Image result for stan & ollieThe bit of story that’s wedged in is fabricated and that’s another weird part.  The film shows animosity between Laurel and Hardy over a film Ollie made without Stan in the late 30’s due to their contracts ending at different times with producer/studio owner Hal Roach.  In real life I don’t know if there were hard feelings over that or the other couple of pictures Hardy did without his partner (although later in the late 40’s) but there was no fight in public where they called each other terrible things and threw shit across the room.  I know the protagonists-fight-before-the-climax cliché is in every single thing that’s released nowadays but come on, the fucking Laurel and Hardy biopic too?  If they had scaled it back to where the pair only had a few brief cross words I could accept it more, but the confrontation is so serious and mean that it feels totally out of place in an otherwise lighthearted movie.

Pretty much everything else that happens is true though from what I understand.  And when I say “everything else” I mean the team goes on a tour, it’s a success and they end their career on a high note.  There’s really nothing to tell.  And it’s not like Stan and Ollie led fascinating lives off camera but the filmmakers fucked up and focused on the wrong era.  They were comic geniuses and amazing performers but they were not interesting in real life, like at all.  Between films Ollie was either golfing or betting on the ponies most of the time and when Stan wasn’t in the editing room essentially re-directing the movie (because he would more or less direct during filming) he was constantly working on gags for the next project and writing scripts.

The final weird aspect I wanna point out is the film itself is a comedy.  Going into this I didn’t realize that.  There are bits like the boys hauling a heavy trunk up a flight of stairs only for it to slide all the way down to the bottom like in their short The Music Box, and Stan and Ollie’s wives are like a comedy team unto themselves with Ida Laurel’s (Nina Arianda (Midnight in Paris)) thick Russian accent and misunderstanding of words or phrases and Lucille Hardy’s (Shirley Henderson (Trainspotting)) quick wit.  Again, Laurel and Hardy used silly wife characters in many of their pictures.  This stuff is cute but not laugh out loud funny.  Sure, ridiculous exaggerated characters were a staple of their films but it goes to show you can’t simply recreate gags and assume they will automatically be funny.

Image result for stan & ollieThis film isn’t for everyone.  If you’re unfamiliar with the comedy team this isn’t going to get you into them.  A better introduction would be to watch the pictures they made (start with the 30’s shorts).  This movie is pretty much only for die hard Laurel and Hardy fans (and if you couldn’t tell already I might be one of those).  There isn’t an intriguing story or characters that you can latch onto even if you otherwise don’t care who these two guys were.  I mean look, Reilly and Coogan are remarkable but if you don’t know where they’re working from it’s probably gonna be lost on you.  I have to admit this actually isn’t a great film but there are great things in it.  The 100% sixty plus crowd I saw it with seemed to enjoy it.

And seeing Reilly in a huge fat suit and tons of prosthetic makeup and believing that that’s really Oliver Hardy and it doesn’t look creepy as shit ok maybe in a few spots when he turns his head too far or opens his mouth too wide and he got the soft southern accent down and the inflection Coogan gives when he speaks that’s instantly recognizable as Stan Laurel and the rhythm of his speech and his child-like facial expressions and the comedy timing of the two guys, well, it’s an extraordinary achievement.  Just don’t expect a plot of any kind.

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