We Faw Down (1928) Poster

(1928)

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8/10
If Ralph Kramden & Ed Norton had been around in 1928
wmorrow5922 September 2003
This is a fairly obscure Laurel & Hardy comedy which deserves to be better known, for while it's no masterpiece it is quite funny and entertaining, as well as unusual in some respects. We Faw Down is one of the earliest explorations of Stan & Ollie's relationships with their wives, and in 1933 it would serve as a blue-print for their best Battle of the Sexes feature, Sons of the Desert. It plays rather like a silent version of "The Honeymooners." Imagine Ralph Kramden & Ed Norton in this scenario: the boys tell their wives a fib in order to sneak out and play poker, but en route to the game they manage to get entangled with a boxer's flirty girlfriend; later, after narrowly escaping from the murderous boxer, they make matters worse for themselves by blatantly lying about the whole episode to their wives, who are now furious. The Gleason & Carney parallel with Laurel & Hardy has long been noticed, but it's especially apparent here, although in Laurel & Hardy's world it appears that forgiveness and understanding are harder to come by than in the Kramdens' apartment: at the end of this film, Mrs. Hardy is chasing the guys through an alley with a shotgun, firing at them. It's hard to imagine Alice Kramden doing that.

At any rate, what we have here is a Roaring Twenties sitcom, nicely photographed (by George Stevens, no less), smoothly directed (by Leo McCarey, no less), and beautifully well acted by the entire cast, Stan and Ollie in particular. At their best, Laurel & Hardy are so natural we don't even think of them as actors, but what better definition is there of first-rate acting? As actors playing off each other, the guys are at the top of their game in this short. Watch the interplay of their facial expressions in the opening scene as they conspire to fool their wives -- they couldn't fool grade school kids, but it's fun to watch them attempt to be sly. And later, when the boys are semi-innocently ensnared by two good time gals, there is a delightful extended sequence in which Stan is playfully tormented by the boxer's girlfriend, to his mounting annoyance and Ollie's growing amusement.

This is where the film gets into unusual territory, at least for viewers accustomed to the later, more child-like Laurel & Hardy. Although their characterizations are essentially in place in this early short, Stan and Ollie are distinctly more grown-up in their response to the sordid situation they get themselves into; they're simpletons to be sure, but grown-ups nonetheless. They're not entirely innocent, and they exchange wicked conspiratorial grins throughout. Even in the final sequence, when their story unravels and they stand revealed as liars, they can barely conceal their impish amusement over the whole thing -- and that's something you won't find later on, as they became more infantile and more fearful of their wives. They do pay for their misbehavior here, but at least they get some kicks along the way, and that's kind of a treat. You might say that We Faw Down presents Laurel & Hardy at their naughtiest.

Casting Note: In this film Mrs. Laurel is played by Bess Flowers, later to become famous -- to movie buffs, that is -- as the Queen of the Hollywood Extras. She appeared in scores of movies throughout the entire Golden Age of the studio system, usually as an elegantly attired dress extra. (Just check out this woman's filmography, it's amazing!) We Faw Down provides Ms. Flowers with a rare opportunity to play comedy in a featured role, and gives viewers a rare chance to get a look at this attractive lady for more than a few seconds. It's nice to see that she could hold her own with two of the top comedians in the business.
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7/10
Amazingly familiar but funny
planktonrules31 August 2008
This film features Laurel and Hardy in a very familiar plot. As is often the case, the boys go out to play and lie to the wives about it--with disastrous results. This type of situation was featured in several films made by the team (such as THEIR PURPLE MOMENT and BLOTTO) and was remade very closely in SONS OF THE DESERT. In fact, after Laurel and Hardy, this same plot was reworked on "The Honeymooners" and even "The Flintstones"!

In this film, Stan and Ollie go out for a good time and meet two ladies who eventually ask them back to their apartment. What they don't know is that the wives suspect the boys are playing around and one of the lady has a boyfriend who is a professional boxer! The wives actually catch them in the act but Stan and Ollie don't know it--and there is a very, very long segment where the boys make up lie after lie to explain themselves. This leads to an expectedly violent confrontation. The end was cute and repeated very closely in BLOCKHEADS. While there's a lot of familiar material in this short, it is very well done and funny.
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7/10
Standard and predictable but once more wonderfully executed!
Boba_Fett11386 January 2006
Once more the famous two get in some serious trouble with their wives, after a series of unfortunate incidents, which forces them to come up with a lie, which of course only make their situation even worser...

The jokes remain funny, even after they are repeated multiple times in the movie. The events leading up to the confrontation with the two wives are both wonderfully constructed and executed and filled with some typical slapstick humor. The movie knows to remain constantly funny throughout the whole movie which makes this a very consistent comedy to watch.

The ending might have some slow moments in it and might not be as funny as the first part of the movie, it doesn't really make the movie less pleasant to watch. "We Faw Down" is good enough for more than a few laughs and it shows Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy once more in top-form and their chemistry and timing is spot-on!

Perhaps not as memorable and good as other Laurel & Hardy pictures but still an entertaining and watchable comedy-short from the famous comical duo.

7/10

http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
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7/10
Laurel & Hardy's We Faw Down has them doing some funny pantomime
tavm5 August 2011
Just watched this Laurel & Hardy comedy on Hulu as linked from IMDb. In this one, Stan & Ollie are trying to get to a poker game but their wives seemed determined to keep them at home. So when someone from there calls, Ollie takes it and addresses him as Boss so he could fool the spouses that he and Stan are going to the Orpheum Theater to see a live show with him. After they leave, they meet a couple of ladies after one of them misplaces a hat...I'll stop there and just say while there's not too much slapstick here (though the give-and-take between Stan and one of the ladies was pretty funny), there is some highly amusing pantomime between the boys when they try to describe what they saw in the show as the wives can only grimace at what they know are bald-faced lies. Don't want to reveal much more than that so I'll just say I recommend We Faw Down. P.S. On YouTube, there's an "extended" version which puts nearly the entirety of Laurel & Hardy's next short, Liberty, in the middle of it. This is obviously because those scenes were originally part of this short but had to be cut for time constraints.
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7/10
Caught with their pants down, the boys try to mollify their wives' vengeance.
weezeralfalfa12 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
L&H are bad boys, from their wives' perspectives, but not quite as bad as their wives are led to believe, from what they saw. The boys just wanted to play some poker with their friends at another house. But, telling their wives they were going to a live theater, they never made it to their poker date, because they were diverted in trying to help a young lady retrieve her hat from under a car. Although Ollie pushed the car forward to allow an easy retrieval, unfortunately, a street cleaner, spraying water, came along, and got the boys good and soaked.. The lady and her friend, also present, lived together in an apartment, and invited the boys up to their apartment, to dry their clothes, and possibly do some other things? The boys agreed, and soon were wearing the girls' bathrobes, while their outer clothes were hung to dry. The girls brought out some bottled beer, which the boys had trouble with. While the one girl went in the kitchen to prepare some food, the other wanted to flirt with Stan, who unfortunately wasn't in the mood. Nonetheless, he finally came around, and eventually knocked her on the floor. Then, he said he really didn't like her, and that she was too fat. So, she chased him around the table, until her boxer boyfriend happened by. When he saw what was going on, he grabbed a knife, and threatened the boys. But, quick -thinking Stan picked up the pie that the one girl was bringing in from the kitchen ,and smushed it in the bruiser's face. The boys ran to get their clothes and started to put them on as they climbed out the street window(this being the first floor). Unfortunately, their wives were coming down the street to check out the news report that the theater they were supposed to go to had burned down. When they saw the boys with their pants only half on, they hid behind a corner, so that the boys didn't see them. They also saw a woman stick her head out the window and tell them to run. Both pairs headed for the Hardy's house, the wives getting there first. When the boys showed up, the wives had very stern faces, like they didn't believe the boys' story. Hardy tried to diffuse their doubts, to no avail. The boys were asked to describe what they saw at the theater. They hem and hawed. Stan found a program behind the wives, and tried to communicate to Ollie what it said. Ollie put on a makeshift hula skirt to demonstrate. The wives were not impressed. Then, Stan showed Ollie the newspaper saying the theater had burned down. Ollie claimed they went to another theater, but the wives weren't impressed. Just then, one of the girls arrived with Ollie's vest, he had left behind(How did she know where to go??). This was the last straw. Ollie's wife exploded and got out their rifle, and chased the boys out, firing at them.
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7/10
You Can Not Outsmart Your Wife.
rmax3048235 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
It's one of their better silent two reelers, with a plot that was borrowed and refurbished later for "Sons of the Desert." Stan and Ollie want to go to a poker game. They tell their wives they're going to a movie at the Orpheum, a more innocent and acceptable enterprise.

They don't make it to the game though. On their way, they both get soaked while trying to retrieve a lady's hat. The grateful woman and her companion invite the two into their apartment to dry their clothes. One of the women puts moves on Stan, who resents it and repeatedly shoves her onto the floor in an extended, less-than-hilarious scene.

Ollie's lady is the girl friend of a tough boxer called "One Round" Kelly. When he bursts in, Stan and Ollie shed their bathrobes, grab their clothes, and dive out the window. They run home, trying to fix their clothes at the same time. Unknown to them, the wives have learned that the Orpheum Theater has just burned down.

The ending is very amusing. Stan's wife has been duck hunting and still carries her shotgun. She races after them. They run through a garden apartment and she fires the shotgun at them from a distance, at which half-dressed men tumble out of all of the neighboring windows.

If you're indifferent to Laurel and Hardy, you probably won't find this appealing. Their characters are already established and familiar. Ollie is pompous and sarcastic, but self aware. Stan Laurel has the intelligence of something growing out of your lawn and spoiling its appearance, and he's easily terrified. Fans, on the other hand, will love it.
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8/10
Not really silent
peterm-97 February 2008
Just a quick note to say that this movie is silent, but was nevertheless released with music and effects on Vitaphone discs. The discs has been found, and at least the German Kinowelt DVD release of Sons of the Desert has We Faw Down as an bonus, complete with the music and effects track.

It is always a bonus to watch the silent Laurel & Hardy comedies with the proper, original music and effects track. This brings us a little bit closer to the film's original state.

In general, the Vitaphone system did not last very long, but the system of having soundtracks stored separately does open the possibility of restoring soundtracks even if the film element has been put together from various prints.
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9/10
Hilarious Forerunner To Sons Of The Desert
verbusen20 January 2014
Warning: Spoilers
+++Spoilers+++ Wow! The only regret I have of this one is it's too short! This is the same formula as Sons Of The Desert (and a little Blotto also), Stan and Ollie go out without their two wives and of course all heck breaks loose for them both. This one is early on in their comedy pair years and I have never watched it before today since they never show silent films on syndicated TV, I watched this on a collection I have I think from Kino. There were some laughter sound effects from the characters added in that worked good. Like I wrote, this is very similar to Son's Of The Desert, except the boys get themselves involved with a couple of really loose women not just dance girls like in SOTD, and agree to go to their apartment to "dry off your wet clothes". If you think that sounds racy, you are correct, this one is not for the kids. Ollie at one point tells Stan to "be bohemian" and make "whoopie" with a woman who is trying to kiss Stan. At one point he tells Ollie out loud, I don't like her she's too fat! If you like racy Laurel and Hardy (and who doesn't?) then this may be the funniest material they have ever done. I have watched a few silent L&H's before but this was the one that made me laugh the most, it actually made me laugh more then most of their talkies as well! 9 out of 10 rating, I only wish it had been longer! Must see if you are a Sons Of The Desert fan!
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8/10
A very entertaining slip up
TheLittleSongbird21 August 2018
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were comedic geniuses, individually and together, and their partnership was deservedly iconic and one of the best there was. They left behind a large body of work, a vast majority of it being entertaining to classic comedy, at their best they were hilarious and their best efforts were great examples of how to do comedy without being juvenile or distasteful.

Although a vast majority of Laurel and Hardy's previous efforts ranged from above average to very good ('45 Minutes from Hollywood' being the only misfire and mainly worth seeing as a curiosity piece and for historical interest, and even that wasn't a complete mess), 'Two Tars' for me was their first great one with close to flawless execution. 'We Slip Up' is not quite as good, but is still among their best and funniest early efforts. Their filmography, apart from a few bumps along the way, was getting better and better and that is obvious here.

It may not be "new" material as such and the first part takes a little bit of time to get going.

When 'We Slip Up' does get going, which it does do very quickly, it is non-stop fun, not always hilarious but never less than very amusing. There is insane craziness that doesn't get too silly, a wackiness that never loses its energy and the sly wit emerges here, some of the material may not be new but how it's executed actually feels fresh and it doesn't get repetitive.

Laurel and Hardy are on top form here, both are well used, both have material worthy of them and they're equal rather than one being funnier than the other (before Laurel tended to be funnier and more interesting than Hardy, who tended to be underused). Their chemistry feels like a partnership here too, before 'Two Tars' you were yearning for more scenes with them together but in 'We Slip Up' we are far from robbed of that.

'We Slip Up' looks good visually, is full of energy and the direction gets the best out of the stars, is at ease with the material and doesn't let it get too busy or static. The supporting players are solid.

Overall, very good. Not essential or classic Laurel and Hardy, but a good representation of them. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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4/10
The precursor of SONS OF THE DESERT
Libretio18 March 2005
WE FAW DOWN

Aspect ratio: 1.33:1

Sound format: Silent

(Black and white - Short film)

Stan 'n' Ollie get mixed up with a couple of floozies (Kay Deslys and Vera White) after setting out to visit a theatre which burns down in their absence! Needless to say, their tyrannical wives (Vivien Oakland and Bess Flowers) are not amused...

Leo McCarey's OK comedy laid the narrative framework for William Seiter's masterpiece SONS OF THE DESERT (1934), with L&H playing brow-beaten victims of circumstance, forced to tell a monstrous lie which backfires in spectacular fashion. Much of it is very funny, especially the scene in which Stan is teased by Deslys, leading to a violent game of push and shove. However, some of the fun is undercut by Oakland and Flowers, playing their roles completely straight, which adds an element of unpleasantness to the 'henpecked husband' scenario. Originally released in the UK as WE SLIP UP.
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8/10
We Faw Down review
JoeytheBrit4 May 2020
An early pre-talkie Laurel & Hardy short with the formula already in place. Memorable for the scene in which Stan's eyebrow shoots toward his hairline every time his flirty companion presses his nose and his tongue pops out when she pokes his throat.
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Middle Ground L&H
Michael_Elliott26 February 2008
We Faw Down (1928)

** (out of 4)

Routine Laurel and Hardy short has the boys lying to their wives and sneaking out for a poker game but they're picked up by two flirts. This here has a couple good laughs including a wonderful site gag at the end but there's really nothing here that separates it from better shorts dealing with the same subject matter.

I viewed this film in the 21-disc, UK box set, which is a dream come true for fans of Laurel and Hardy. It's certainly worth the money if you are a fan.
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8/10
Future Film Ideas Spawned From This Short
springfieldrental28 May 2022
Stan Laurel and the writers for the Laurel and Hardy series of shorts and features on occasion reworked their movies from the pair's previous films. A good example is their December 1928's "We Faw Down." The story concerns the two falsely telling their wives they're going to a movie, but they're really playing poker at their friend's house. They get sidetracked helping two women get one of their hats wedged underneath a car. Laurel and Hardy's charitable act leads to a messy situation with one of the ladies' husband. When the two wives hear about what happened, there's heck to pay. If this sounds like Laurel and Hardy's 1933's "Sons of the Desert," this is exactly the outline of their classic feature film.

In addition, 1932's 'Their First Mistake' copies the telephone gag from "We Faw Down," pretending the call is from the pair's new boss. There were also scenes in "We Faw Down" that didn't make the final edit, but ended up in their next release, 1929's 'Liberty.'

Oliver Hardy told the pair's team of writers the tale he heard was from his laundress that spawned the "We Faw Down's" plot. It was a rare instance where Hardy's suggestion resulted in a storyline. Most of their movies' inspiration came from Laurel, who sketched a majority of the team's screenplays. Years of experience in comedy made Stan adept in shaping his writers' scripts, improving and adding a number of hilarious sequences. His working sessions were loud affairs with several writers in a conference room where each attempted to top the others by suggesting increasingly outrageous situations.

"We Faw Down" was Leo McCarey's first short directing Laurel and Hardy. He claimed he was responsible in pairing the two as a team the previous year (1927). McCarey's name was always listed in the credits as the 'Supervising Director.' For the first time he found out just as other directors before him that Laurel essentially ran the movie set. There was an unwitting understanding the head director always deferred to Stan. Hal Roach, their producer, said if Laurel didn't like what the director was telling them, "the director didn't say 'Well, you're going to do it anyway.' That was understood." Laurel would suggest the direction the scene was going to take, and the director picked up on the comic's idea and ran with it.
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5/10
We Faw Down
jboothmillard18 June 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy are the most famous comedy duo in history, and deservedly so, so I am happy to see any of their films. Stan and Ollie have planned a poker game, and they get their wives to believe they are going to see a show at the Orpheum Theatre. On their way to the game, the boys help a woman get her hat (blown off) back, and when they are soaked by a passing jet wash truck, they take them to their place to dry off. Meanwhile, Mrs. Hardy (Vivien Oakland) and Mrs. Laurel (Bess Flowers) get the newspaper reporting that the Orpheum has burned down, and they go there to find out if their husbands got out. The boys are now in dressing gowns, and Stan is being poked and having his hair messed with by one of the women laughing and saying "whoopee", and she only stops when he calls her fat, and a jealous knife holding man chases him and Ollieout the window, with their wives seeing everything. When the boys get back home, the wives are sitting down listening to Ollie's lies as he explains what they got up to at the Orpheum, with Stan miming some suggestions of what to say. Stan eventually sees the newspaper report about the Theatre, and shows Ollies, he also laughs at the excuse Ollie gives for not going there. One of the women comes round to give the boys their vests, and they are chased out by their wives, one of them shooting a gun, and at the same time, many other men only in vests and shorts are jumping out the window. Filled with good slapstick and all classic comedy you want from a black and white film, it is an enjoyable silent film. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were number 7 on The Comedians' Comedian. Worth watching!
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4/10
Not one of their brightest
Horst_In_Translation23 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"We Faw Down" is an American live action short film from 1928, so this one had its 90th anniversary last year. Director McCarey (long before his Oscar glory) and writer Walker were among the most known and most prolific during that era and here they got to work with two absolute superstars like on many other occasions. These two are of course Laurel and Hardy aka Stan & Ollie and they are probably still considered the most famous duo in film history or at least the most known comedy duo. It is not one of their earliest works, but one of their earlier still which you obviously recognize by this being a silent movie. Don't be fooled by soundtracks added later on. It runs for pretty much exactly 20 minutes. This is not one of Stan and Ollie's most known works, not among their least known either, but certainly closer to the bottom end, which is why certainly not as many people have seen this one compared to the famous piano short for example. And I can see why. I must say I was not too impressed by this one. The generic story with their wives not being too amused by them is one that has been done so many times back then (also by these two) and it is tough to get in anything new here with regard to that. So even with these legends the quality stands and falls with the screenplay. Of course, the two are still elevating the material with their mannerisms, slapstick and face expressions, but overall it was not enough for me to really enjoy this one. It is maybe more interesting to draw some information about back in the day from the film, for example how, even if people still watch it today, boxing was on a whole different level of popularity at that time. Don't get me wrong. I certainly do not think this film is anywhere close to a failure, but it is not a work you would want to start with when taking a look into Laurel and Hardy's gigantic body of work. Go for something else instead. And only watch this one if you know already you really dig these two. I give it a thumbs-down.
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a love affair with the camera
kekseksa20 August 2018
I am not in the least a fan of Laurel and Hardy. This is not the kind of comedy that makes me laugh. But it is impossible not to appreciate the very "intimate" nature of their comedy that, while it owes something to Linder and to Chaplin, sets them apart from other comics of their time and to some extent explains why, virtually alone of those comics they would continue so successfully into the television era. Their comedy is of a childish simplicity and their plots are unoriginal but the sheer physicality of their performances based ona peculair chemistry between the two allows for an interplay not only between themselves but with the other players too that brings them close to the audience - sometimes rather uncomfortably close - in a way no comics had previously even atempted. It relies to some extent on the greater closeness of the camera that becomes possible from the mid-twenties but is very ittle dependent on sound, while other comics who achieved a similar intimacy in a more adult register - the Marx Brothers or W. C. Fields - were very reliant on sound to be effective in the cinema.
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Their Best
GManfred17 August 2018
Of all the L&H features and shorts, "We Faw Down" has to be the funniest of all. It is non-stop comedy, with one sight gag after another and each one funnier than the one before it. It is directed by the King of Comedy Directors, Leo McCarey, and some of the gags contained in this one reappear in future L&H films in later years. I can tell you one because it is the premise of the story; just as in "Sons Of The Desert", the boys cook up a pretext to escape from their wives, only to be discovered via a natural disaster. The other is used in "Blockheads", but I won't give it away. You can also see Bess Flowers as Stan's wife, who holds the record for most film credits with 825. If you have an opportunity, "We Faw Down" is not be missed. And it's a silent! Shown at Capitolfest, Rome NY, 8/18.

9/10 - Website no longer prints my star rating.
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