Double Whoopee (1929) Poster

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6/10
Silent era comedy short
Leofwine_draca6 July 2014
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.
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7/10
Enjoyable silent Laurel & Hardy comedy short.
Boba_Fett113817 July 2006
Nothing too remarkable just some good old fashioned entertainment.

The story of this movie is definitely not the strongest and is quite simple as well as formulaic, especially in the beginning. Luckily the movie later turns into a more slapstick like filled silent comedy shorts, with as a result some memorable funny sequences.

There are certainly some good comical sequences in this movie, which help to distinct this movie from other early Laurel & Hardy silent comedy shorts. Also the characters are fun and deliciously over-the-top. I especially liked the prince and his prime minister, for who at first our two boys were mistaken. The moments with them were the one's that made me laugh the most, despite the fact that it mostly was just nothing more than a constantly returning continuity joke.

The famous Jean Harlow also plays a part in this movie. Her presence works uplifting for the movie and also probably help to make this movie more of a memorable one than it in fact truly is on its own.

Not the best or most interesting Laurel & Hardy silent comedy shorts but enough things present to make this movie a better than average one.

7/10

http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
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6/10
Not Quite "Double" The Fun, But Close
sweetnlowdown224 June 2003
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 ****
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Funny, and surprisingly sexy
skad1326 August 1999
"Must" viewing for all Stan and Ollie fans, as they make short shrift of an upscale hotel. It's also worth viewing for what is surely the only erotic moment in a Laurel & Hardy fan, as Stan causes Jean Harlow to inadvertently lose her dress. In R-rated terms it's nothing, but for 1929, it's pretty darn
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7/10
Double trouble, with Stan and Ollie as hotel functionaries
weezeralfalfa16 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Presumably, the title of this late silent comedy short(20 min.) refers to the stated reason for the arrival of a German-looking prince: that he wanted to engage in 'whoopee'. Well, if he succeeded, we never saw it. About the only notable thing we see him do is to fall to the bottom of the elevator shaft: not once, but 3X ,as a running gag. Where are the elevator doors in this swanky hotel, that normally prevent such accidents?? .......The prince(Hans Joby) and his prime minister arrive by taxi: the prince decked out in a military uniform. with a German-like officers hat with peak in front. Coincidentally, Ollie and Stan arrived at the same time, as special doorman and footman. The pair got to the front desk before the prince and PM entered the hotel. The staff had been told that the prince had just arrived. Thus, they stupidly assumed that Ollie and Stan were the prince and PM. How they could make such a mistake is beyond me. The boys were wearing their usual street clothes, not yet their fancy work uniforms. Ollie hands the manager a letter from the employment office, which dispelled any lingering thoughts that they were the guests of honor. ......The boys have a couple of notable squabbles. First, Stan gets a coin from a man who he opened the main door for. Ollie is jealous, and demands that Stan give him the coin, since that was supposed to be his job. Stan cries, then gives him the coin. But, a policeman sees this and makes Ollie give the coin back to Stan. The second incident occurs just after the Jean Harlow(no 'e' on the end) incident. Apparently, Stan was mad because Ollie ripped off his jacket, leaving him in underwear, in order to cover for Jean's partly missing dress. He pokes Ollie in the eye and kicks him. Ollie returns the favor. Eventually, some staff and a cop get involved, poking each other in the eye, etc.........Now, about the Jean Harlow incident: The taxi carrying her drives up to the main entrance, and Stan opens the taxi door. Jean gets out and stands there for a while. Ollie, in his most cordial voice asks "Might I presume that you would condescend to accept my escortage". She does accept, and they walk toward the hotel. But, Stan closes the taxi door too quickly and it catches the end of her dress, pulling off part of her dress. Strangely, neither she nor Ollie notice this until Stan tells them ,inside. Can you tell this blond is Jean Harlow? No way!. I have a suspicion she may have been involved in the prince's search for 'whoopee'........Then, there's the whistle incident. A whistle came with Ollie's jacket. He's supposed to blow it to call a taxi when there is someone standing there that wants a taxi. But Stan can't resist blowing it when a cab is not needed The cabbie(I think Charlie Hall) gets out and rips the whistle off Ollie's jacket, then rips Ollie's hat off. Stan tears the cabby's hat, then the cabby rips a button off Ollie's jacket. The cabbie turns around and doesn't see the policeman who is standing between him and Ollie. The cabby turns around and tries to rip a button of the policeman's uniform. When he sees who it is, he runs to his cab and drives off........I disagree with those who say there's little real humor in this short. Maybe they just aren't used to silent comedies? ......See it at YouTube.
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7/10
The biggest reason to see this Laurel and Hardy film is to see a very young Jean Harlow
planktonrules23 August 2008
For years there has been a half-truth among Hollywood lore that Howard Hughes "discovered" Jean Harlow when he cast her to star in HELL'S ANGELS. While this may have been her first big role, she'd already appeared in quite a few shorts for the Hal Roach Studios. This film, in fact, was the second Laurel and Hardy film in which she appeared (the other being LIBERTY). While her role is not huge, it's very clear that this is Jean--though her 1930s trademark looks are not present in DOUBLE WHOOPEE.

Aside from Jean, it's pretty much an average to below average Laurel and Hardy film. I think most of this is because while funny, the chemistry isn't quite right here, though it's hard to exactly put my finger on it. It just didn't seem quite like a Laurel and Hardy film--and by 1929 the style and format of their shorts was pretty much established.

The boys play employees that are sent by an agency to work at a nice New York hotel. At the same time, a rich European prince arrives and the folks at the hotel mistake Stan and Ollie for the prince and his Prime Minister. After finally discovering the mistake, they put the boys to work.

There are two main "big gags" in this film. The first involves a contrived bit involving an incredibly unsafe elevator. Through no fault of Stan and Ollie, the Prince keeps falling down the elevator shaft. This bit was a bit over-used and also had me wondering if they really made elevators like this. If so, then I am surprised that most Americans weren't killed! The second is a series of bit like you'd see in other Laurel and Hardy films such as TIT FOR TAT and TWO TARS. A small argument escalates and Ollie and a tough guy (Charles Hall--in a very typical role for him) start destroying each other's clothes--and Stan joining in for good measure. This bit is reprised later inside the hotel with the other hotel employees and soon everyone is fighting and destroying each other's outfits. Both gags are reasonably funny to watch but also seem amazingly contrived if not impossible--making the humor just a bit forced. Still, it's not a bad film at all, though one that is best remembered for a small part played by a young and relatively inexperienced Jean Harlow.
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7/10
"There is some reason to believe that they may be competent."
classicsoncall9 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Whoever typed up the job recommendation for Laurel and Hardy (see above) probably didn't know them very well. The Boys rewrite the rule book on the doorman position of an upscale hotel, throwing the entire assemblage of guests and staff into an uproar. Recurring bits involve a visiting Prussian dignitary (Hans Joby) falling down an elevator shaft, and a frustrated cab driver (Charlie Hall) rounding the block every time Ollie inadvertently 'blews' his whistle. The treat for this viewer was catching Harlean Carpenter in a quick appearance, in a rather daring scene exposing her bare back when the gown she's wearing gets caught in a taxi door. In the credits she's listed as the 'swanky blonde', and that she is once you realize she's Jean Harlow. Among the myriad of eye pokes, foot stomps and requisite pratfalls, Laurel and Hardy once again wreak havoc where more refined hotel guests would fear to tread.
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10/10
Jean's torn dress, and "Von Stroheim" gets the treatment
theowinthrop9 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
"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!
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6/10
Hotel fun with Stan and Ollie
Horst_In_Translation19 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I have not understood the funny reference of the title "Double Whoopee", but that did not keep me from enjoying this Laurel/Hardy short film from over 85 years ago. It is one of their early works, still silent and of course in black-and-white. The duo is employed at a hotel and causes lots of chaos for the guests, but also for their fellow employees. Of course, (almost) none of it is intentional, which makes this one a fun watch with the lead duo's clumsiness. I usually find Stan funnier, but here Ollie is the MVP for me. Oh yeah, as you see on the cast list, the ill-fated Jean Harlow also plays in this one and she is really young here. However, her billing is too high as she basically only has one scene and several supporting players have more screen time. The intertitles were frequent here as well, which is always nice as they are crucial in understanding the story/comedy. I enjoyed this little film, certainly one of the better early works from the famous duo. Recommended.
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10/10
Bidding a fond farewell to the Silent Era with Beautiful Gags, Beautiful Sets and Beautiful Jean Harlowe in Truly Beautiful Looking Black & White 2 Reeler!
redryan648 February 2008
The Sound Era was fast, crashing down on the movie industry in when DOUBLE WHOOPEE (Hal Roach/MGM, 1929) was released on May 18th of that year. The Laurel & Hardy show had just about hit its pinnacle; following years of trial and error after their accidental pairing in 1926. The two distinguished members of the Hal Roach All-Stars, Stan & "Babe", had truly found their destinies for immortality together.

Stan's penchant for slowly and meticulously working out gags, slowing down the pacing in order to milk all of the situations of their maximum laugh potential. Working closely with the Boss Man, Hal Roach and Writer/Director and later Supervising Director, Leo McCarey and his principle of "Reciprocal Destruction", the Laurel & Hardy style was established and known. Now, polished both on the surface and on the inside, the Team was ready to conquer other worlds. But first, they had to complete the last of their Silent Shorts.

OUR STORY………..DOUBLE WHOOPEE begins with a double case of mistaken identity. With the Hotel's receiving word of the anticipated arrival of the 'Prince' and his Prime Minister, Stan & Ollie are falsely believed to be them. Every courtesy is extended to them; up to the point of being overly obsequious.

The Hotel Manager (William Gillespie) was right on hand to supervise the Front Desk Clerk (Rolf Sedan) in his registering the visiting "Royalty." The first extended gag of the picture occurs here as Ollie insists on the proper etiquette of having his hat removed while signing the register. The team s-t-r-e-t-c-h-e-s out the whole bit with Hardy's unsuccessful attempts to get Laurel to do the same.

Eventually the Royal Party does arrive, with the Prince (Hans Joby), an Eric Von Stroheim look-alike and Prime Minister (Charley Rogers). At that time the boys present a letter from their employment agency concerning the pair's limited abilities and competence as the Hotel's new Doorman (Babe) and Coachman (Stan).

The bulk of the film was occupied with the boys having troubles with the Prince and the Elevator, their interplay with a couple of Cabbies (Charlie Hall, Ham Kinsey) and their confrontation with the Cop pounding' the Beat (Stanley J. 'Tiny' Sandford). As Doorman, Ollie has a brief encounter with a lovely Blonde Bombshell (Jean Harlowe). Arriving by way of another Taxicab, the lovely Miss Harlowe (Woo, woo, woo, woo!) is greeted by 'Babe'with the line: "Might I presume that you would condescend to accept my escortage?" Then, offering his arm to her, he walks her to the revolving door, while catching the train of her dress in the Cab's door! DOUBLE WHOOPEE was one film that was even a little slower than most other L&H's, but by the same token, it was an excellent example of the Roach/McCarey/Laurel brand of slow moving, carefully designed and meticulously fashioned laugh schtick! And it appears to have been filmed at nighttime, after dark in and about areal, fancy old Hotel.

Along with BIG BUSINESS (Hal Roach/MGM, also 1929) gave the Laurel & Hardy silents a great send-off, with top notch, out door and beautiful looking shorts. They had successfully developed their style, routines and could practically "hear" the characters. Now that sound had arrived and other actors struggled with their real vocal gyrations; the danger being that the voice wasn't fit for the sound screen. Of course that was no problem for "the Boys" as their voices fit their screen persona perfectly.

After a few slow starts in sound, Stanley & Oliver regained their stride and never looked back. They would shortly conquer the new medium. They were then and now tops in the field! POODLE SCHNITZ!!
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9/10
Both silent and sound versions of Laurel & Hardy's Double Whoopee are hilarious to me
tavm12 August 2011
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.
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5/10
Hotel Flunkies.
rmax30482316 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Silent. An employment agency sends Stan and Ollie to a fancy hotel, with a note of introduction: "We have reason to believe they may be competent." Of course, they're not.

First off, they're mistaken for a visiting Prince and Prime Minister, and there are some diverting moments involving their signing the register, with Ollie shaking the ink out of the pen and the Prince falling into the grime at the bottom of the elevator shaft.

The teen-aged Jean Harlow appears for a few minutes, and, man, she is gorgeous and sexy. Whew.

There are some running gags involving a beat cop and a cab driver but there's nothing outrageously comic about them. It's a reasonably entertaining short, with Stan and Ollie doing their usual stuff.
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9/10
The First Laugh
boblipton8 December 2020
Laurel and Hardy are the new doorman and footman at a Times Square hotel. The agency thinks there's some rason to believe they are competent. Oviously, they've never met the Boys.

There are also a motley assortment of hotel guests, including Jean Harlow before she was anything more than a stunning blonde, and Erich von Stroheim's double doing a deadly imitation of Von.

You can see that they;'ve already made the shift to sound shorts with UNACCUSTOMED AS WE ARE, which was released two weeks before this. Not only are there plenty of sound effects, but the titles for dialogue are the sort of lines they would speak, reflections of their screen personalities. There's no shortage of laughs in this one.
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8/10
Putting on the ritz
TheLittleSongbird27 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 truly classic one with close to flawless execution. Didn't find 'Double Whoopee' as one of their best and a bit disappointing compared to their late 1928 and previous 1929 efforts, which were among their best and funniest early work. It is still very good and has much of what makes Laurel and Hardy's work as appealing as it is.

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

However, generally 'Double Whoopee' is in a good way not as subdued as 'Unaccustomed As We Are' and there is a return to the insane craziness and wacky slapstick that was properly starting to emerge.

When 'Double Whoopee' does get going, which it does do quite quickly, it is good enough fun, not always hilarious but never less than very amusing. It is never 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 doesn't feel too familiar 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 'Double Whoopee' we are far from robbed of that. Their comic timing is impeccable.

'Double Whoopee' 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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10/10
Great to see a young Jean Harlow !!!
kennyotis-394-88550427 June 2022
Funny as always....but seeing a super young (about 19 old) Jean Harlow was a real treat !! And beautiful hair, face and legs! The complete package....
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2/10
A commentary on whether Jean Harlow is disrobed, and a meh review.
Ben_Cheshire17 May 2015
Apparently Jean Harlow is in this, but she didn't' stand out to me. After reading about it, I watched the potion back and yes a small piece of her dress appears to come off as part of a gag, but her legs are entirely covered by stockings and without a 4K resolution remaster, there's nothing about her that looks remotely disrobed. Anyone who thinks this is raunchy for 1929 is just plain wrong. There's actual nudity in silent movies. Anything prior to 1934 has a huge chance of being absolutely filthy, the Hays Code put a stop to that from 34-54. My favourite is probably in Buster Keaton's One Week, where the girl is having a bath and you see the line of the top of her breast, but she drops something, and has to reach it outside the bath, so a hand comes over the camera while she does and she smiles this amazing smile that acknowledges the audience. Great stuff.

Back to this though. What did stand out was an Erich von Stroheim pastiche. The Prince is absolutely a Stroheim reference. He's got the monocle, the hair, the outfit from say Foolish Wives.

Sadly I didn't find any of Double Whoopee particularly funny or fun compared to the other shorts I've seen, or say Buster Keaton. So my review is "meh," and a meh comedy is not worth your time.
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5/10
Memorable only for Harlow's appearance
JoeytheBrit27 September 2009
This silent Laurel and Hardy short is chiefly memorable for being the one in which young Jean Harlow loses her dress after Stan traps its hem in the door of the cab from which she has just emerged. Other than that moment there isn't much of any note in this film. Stan and Ollie play temporary doormen, sent to work at a posh hotel, who are initially mistaken for a Prussian prince and his prime minister.

The boys create the usual mayhem; Ollie, with the curiosity typical of a small child, blows his the whistle on his uniform to see what happens and is berated by the cabbie who turns up to find a non-existent fare. Later, Stan does the same thing which is the cue for a tit-for-tat battle between the cabbie and the boys. It's an entertaining enough film, but definitely not one of the boy's best.
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5/10
Double Whoopee
jboothmillard22 July 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. At a Broadway hotel they are expecting a prince and his prime minister, they mistake Stan and Ollie for them. So after signing in and the manager greeting them, Ollie gives him the letter that reveals them as a short notice doorman and footman. As they go to change the real Prince (Hans Joby, or Captain John Peters) and Prime Minister (Charley Rogers) show up, and keep ending up at the bottom of the elevator shaft, covered with mud, with Stan and Ollie dressed and walking out of it. Ollie makes the mistake of blowing a whistle for the Cabbie (Charlie Hall), and Stan causes a man's shirt to come apart pulling a loose fibre. Ollie keeps missing the door to let people out, and when Stan manages it he gets a coin from the customer. Ollie of course wants this coin, and Stan's whimpers when he has it taken, till a Policeman (Tiny Sandford) comes along, and Ollie is forced to give him another one when his is tossed down the drain. When Stan blows Ollie's cab whistle, the Cabbie and they end up in a little squabble ripping each other's hats and buttons off, with the Cabbie accidentally doing it to the Policeman. Then a cab pulls up with Swanky blonde (Jean Harlow) coming out, and her dress is ripped off when Stan catches it in the cab door, with Ollie escorting her inside the hotel. After Ollie gets Stan's coat there is another little squabble poking each other with a few others joining in,and some cake getting thrown on the Prince and Prime Minister. The film ends with the Prince and Prime Minister ending up at the bottom of the elevator shaft, with Stan and Ollie changed and walking out. Filled with good slapstick and all classic comedy you want from a black and white film, the music added to the film sounds off tune at times, but I suppose it doesn't matter, it is an enjoyable silent film. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were number 7 on The Comedians' Comedian. Worth watching!
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5/10
Stan and Ollie on Broadway (working in a hotel).
BA_Harrison5 January 2021
I seem to be in the minority here, but I didn't find this one all that amusing (well, not compared to the pair's classic material): the gags are not all that clever and are repeated over and over. Why have a man fall down a lift shaft just once when you can do it three times? I'll tell you why not... because it not that funny in the first place.

There's a little of the tit-for-tat 'Reciprocal Destruction' that formed part of their routine for years, but nothing like on the scale of Big Business (1929); we get quite a bit of eye-poking for those who like that kind of thing (not me); and some food gets thrown about (see Their Purple Moment for much better food slinging by the guys).

The most memorable thing about this short is that Jean Harlow is in it for a few minutes and has her dress torn off by a taxi. Don't get your hopes up though - this might be a pre-code film, but she remains relatively respectable throughout (her slip could pass for a dress these days).

5/10. Don't get me wrong... it's not unwatchable, just not up to the high standards I expect from Laurel and Hardy.
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Good L&H
Michael_Elliott10 August 2008
Double Whoopee (1929)

*** (out of 4)

Silent short has a Royal Prince showing up at a lavished New York City hotel just in time for Laurel and Hardy to start their first day on the job. This is a pretty good short that has a lot of great laughs, although the thing starts to wear out towards the end. The best gag is at the start of the movie when Laurel and Hardy are mistaken for the Prince himself, which leads to the boys welcoming their new fame even though they don't understand what it's all about. Another great gag involves Hardy's constant run ins with a cop (Tiny Sandford). A lot of fans won't watch these Laurel and Hardy silents, which is a real shame because the two were great comic actors even without the benefit of their voices. The two's chemistry is certainly easy to spot and the way the two have to use their facial gestures just adds more laughs. Jean Harlow has a important role towards the end of the film, although I guess it would be more fair to say she has important joke pulled on her when her dress gets caught up in the taxi door, which of course drives off leaving her in next to nothing.
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