Free Eats (1932) Poster

(1932)

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8/10
While not a new idea, it is well worth seeing.
planktonrules2 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
As another reviewer pointed out, this short is a take-off of the film "The Unholy Three"--which were made just a few years earlier. "The Unholy Three" was made twice (once as a silent and the next time as the one and only talking picture starring Lon Chaney) and "Free Eats" is clearly a re-working of the story. In "The Unholy Three", a mob consists of an 'old lady' (really a man in disguise) and strong man and a midget who dresses like a baby--and looks just like one. The three are criminals and spend their time pulling various robberies. Here in "Free Eats", Billy Gilbert plays a father, a guy in drag the mother and they have TWO babies that are actually adults. And, like "The Unholy Three" they are professional crooks.

When there is a local party for underprivileged kids, the Gang go for free food. And, the criminals also attend--during which time, the two babies steal everything in sight. Fortunately, Stymie notices and helps 'stymie' their plans. All in all, while this is a recycled plot idea, it is clever and fun. It also stands out because it's the first Our Gang film with Spanky McFarland--a kid who would get top billing in the next short!
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9/10
Free Eats marked the debut of one George Robert Phillips McFarland-Spanky-in the Our Gang series
tavm25 October 2014
This Hal Roach comedy short, Free Eats, is the one hundred twelfth in the "Our Gang/Little Rascals" series and the twenty-fourth talkie. A wealthy society woman is throwing a party for all the poor kids...in order to help her husband's political campaign. So Breezy, Wheezer, Dorothy, Stymie, and Spanky arrive for the treats. Also arriving are some "fidgits" (Stymie's word)-disguised as infants-and their "parents"-one of whom is Billy Gilbert who previously appeared in Shiver My Timbers and Dogs Is Dogs-who intend to steal some jewelry...As always in these early talkies, Stymie steals the show with most of his quips and how refreshing is seeing his character be the one who sees through the fake babies' facade compared to the way his race was often portrayed at the time. And how cute little Spanky-in his series debut-is with his rambling on various subjects and also when he's with a monkey! So on that note, Free Eats was another funny Our Gang short. P.S. Wheezer is noticeably reduced in screen time here. I'm guessing this is his status in the remaining eps in the series.
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9/10
The Little Rascals vs. the Little Thieves.
mark.waltz15 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Billy Gilbert returns once again for a truly terrific entry in the "Our Gang" series, part of the transition period, and the episode that brought on Spanky McFarland. He's only on for a few minutes, but oh what a scene stealer. Gilbert plays "pop" to two midgets disguised as babies who are very clever thieves. The visuals of the two midgets in old fashioned baby clothes is a bit disturbing, rather garish looking like the 1932 cult classic "Freaks", but obviously influenced by the Lon Chaney classic "The Unholy Three". Stymie is taking over as the ultimate scene stealer, and his interactions with the two diminutive crooks is very funny.
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10/10
Catching Crooks With The Little Rascals
Ron Oliver10 April 2000
An OUR GANG Comedy Short

A wealthy matron is giving FREE EATS to the poor kiddies of the town at her mansion. A `family' of crooks thinks this would be an excellent opportunity for the `babies' - actually two midgets - to steal pocketbooks & jewelry. Fortunately Stymie and the Rascals are on hand...

A funny film, with good performances from all the little people. Film mavens will recognize Billy Gilbert & Paul Fix as `Papa' & "Mama" crook; that's Major Mite & Tiny Lawrence as the two `fidgets'. Incidentally, this was Spanky McFarland's film debut with the Gang. It was evident immediately that he had natural charm & enormous talent. Eventually he would be the most famous Rascal of them all.
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10/10
CRAZY, WILD STUFF ALL THE WAY HOME!
tcchelsey22 June 2022
FREE EATS is yet another of the classic early 1930s Our Gang shorts. This is hands down hilarious.

Billy Gilbert and Paul Fix play the crooked mom and dad to two real-life midgets (one played by Mighty Mite, who eventually became one of the famous Munchkins in the WIZARD OF OZ). A wealthy woman decides to throw a party for the unfortunate kids in the neighborhood. The Rascals naturally stop by for the "free eats" along with Gilbert and Fix's midgets, dressed as babies!

The crooks in turn set out to rob the place blind, even pick-pocketing guests every time they give them a hug! Gotsta' see this! Lots of fun here with all the familiar faces. Del Henderson has a laugh out loud scene as he wrestles one of the midgets who stole his wallet! The midgets (and or Fidgets as they are called here) are the ones to watch and Mighty Mite (smoking a cigar!) has a neat closing line. A real camp classic from old Hollywood. Recommended for all of us big little kids who grew up on this kooky stuff. Get the dvd box set.
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10/10
Spanky!!!
PeachHamBeach26 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
This charming short subject marks the debut of who would end up being the most popular "Rascal" in Hal Roach's Empire. Young Spanky McFarland can't be more than 2 1/2 or 3 years tops when he comes rolling up in his wagon, ready to partake in Mrs. Clark's free eats. The rich lady in town is giving away cake, ice cream and baskets of food to the less fortunate youngsters. Everyone is on hand, Stymie, Spud, Dorothy, Wheezer and Breezy, whose conversation with little Spanky about airplanes and monkeys is one of my favorite moments. But it's not all fun and games. The Gang must stop a family of thieves (Billy Gilbert and a very young Paul Fix as the parents!) from ripping off nice Mrs. Clark. A very cute, engaging film!
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8/10
Stymie stymies the Unholy Four.
F Gwynplaine MacIntyre30 January 2008
I'm not a major fan of Hal Roach's "Our Gang" comedies -- the so-called Little Rascals -- and I usually avoid the Rascals in any movie that shows them eating. I have no desire to watch their table manners, and most of the "gags" are very predictable: close-up of white kid with dark food smeared on his face, followed by close-up of black kid with white food smeared on his face. So, the title "Free Eats" did not whet my appetite.

Fortunately, the Rascals are in good hands here: "Free Eats" is directed by Leo McCarey's unjustly-obscure brother Raymond, and the dialogue is by Roach stalwart H.M. "Beany" Walker.

An opening shot of a newspaper informs us that Mrs Stanford L Clark is throwing a free feed for the local kids, to help her husband's political campaign for the mayoralty.

Now, there are these four crooks who decide to crash the kids-only party. All four crooks are adult men, but two of them are midgets disguised as babies. The other two men pretend to be the "parents" of the babies, with Paul Fix in female disguise as the mama. Oh, mama! Over the decades of his long career, veteran character actor Paul Fix had a wide range of roles: he was Liz Taylor's father in 'Giant', and he was cast as chief medical officer aboard the Starship Enterprise until he got replaced by DeForest Kelley. I was very impressed with Fix's performance in the 1929 drama 'Lucky Star'. Here, disguised as a woman, he gives a much more plausible performance than I would have expected. Fix actually attempts a few gestures that are convincingly feminine rather than effeminate.

The two midgets (one of them twice the size of the other) aren't very plausible as babies. They keep showing off their adult teeth. (Harry Earles, another adult midget who was sometimes cast as a genuine baby, purposely avoided showing his teeth while in infant roles.) Both midgets are spectacularly ugly. At least one speaks in a dubbed voice, probably because most midget performers aren't very good actors. (They tend to get cast for reasons unrelated to acting ability.) The two midgets steal the jewellery of Mrs Clark and her society friends ... knowing that, if they're caught in the act, they'll be mistaken for innocent babies snatching pretty objects.

The alleged 'father' of the midgets is veteran actor Billy Gilbert, giving a surprisingly subdued performance. Gilbert typically overacted and often played blustering idiots, but he was actually a highly intelligent man: I suspect that, finding himself here cast alongside two midgets and a female impersonator, he was smart enough to realise he should play it straight this time.

What really strained credulity for me is that we see Fix and the midgets ALREADY disguised as a woman and her two babies when Billy Gilbert finds out about the party. Do they live in these disguises full-time? Hmmm...

I was intrigued to see good performances here from a couple of kid actors whom I don't recognise from other 'Our Gang' movies. Dorothy DeBorba (looking a little bit like Carl 'Alfalfa' Switzler) is bright and pop-eyed as the head girl. Sherwood Bailey, nicknamed Spud and dressed as a jockey, is the leader of the kid gang. The climax of the movie is genuinely suspenseful, with Bailey getting into a knock-down fight with the nastier of the two midgets. Here we see an adult criminal (admittedly a midget in nappies) trying to beat up a child, and we recognise that Spud is in genuine peril. Bailey gives an excellent performance: why didn't he catch on as one of Our Gang?

I'm never amused when Matthew 'Stymie' Beard or some other black child is used as the butt of racial humour in these crude comedies. In 'Free Eats', intriguingly, young Stymie proves himself a brave and resourceful detective. He's the first to realise that the 'babies' are not what they seem, and he comes up with a clever method of unmasking them ... or maybe undiapering them. 'Free Eats' is one of the more original Our Gang comedies, and this non-fan happily rates it 8 out of 10.
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7/10
Before the hit song "Short People" tried to alert America . . .
pixrox111 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
. . . to the threat posed by adults of Napoleon's stature (or even less tall), the MGM film studio (aka, Munchkins Gone Mad) previewed the larcenous legacy of the notorious "Lollipop Guild" in this 24th Our Gang "Talkie" outing, FREE EATS. Two of Ray Bradbury's "small assassins" go for the gold, silver, bronze, and pearls at Mrs. Stanford J. Clark's Children's Charity Picnic by masquerading as adorable Baboos while actually these wee imposters are up to all kinds of felonious tricks. Filching the jewels from one High Society Matron after another, these vertically challenged miscreants use their diminutive mitts pretty much to molest and strip search their victims. Their Rich Which patsies are only too willing to jump and jiggle at the command of these bogus "babies," aping brainless bimbos bobbing in a bouncy house while aiding in their own witless transfers of wealth. As the feature film ORPHAN recently documented, hordes of fake foreign "tykes" have been infiltrating our Homeland virtually Unvetted under the pretense of international adoption scams. As this infestation gains a toe-hold, murders, mayhem, and other catastrophes make life unbearable for once-trusting U.S. families (not to mention their friends, neighbors, and fellow shoppers). Many if not most Millennials have missed out on seeing FREE EATS, and are totally ignorant of the take-no-quarter Our Gang approach that MUST be implemented to snuff out the incoming tidal wave of counterfeit babies with extreme prejudice. Too bad.
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8/10
Spanky's Film Debut in Our Gang
springfieldrental24 November 2022
Producer Hal Roach was constantly looking for fresh faces while overseeing his "Our Gang" series. On his tenth year with the little ones, Roach saw the series losing childhood actors Jackie Cooper, Allen Hoskins (Farina) and Mary Ann Jackson. A three-year-older suddenly came to the rescue from Dallas, Texas, who eventually gave the Little Rascals a refreshingly new look. His real name was George McFarland, but everyone knows him as Spanky. His first appearance on the screen was February 1932's "Free Eats," a spirited two-reeler where he joins the gang taking part in an all-you-can-eat buffet in the back yard of a high-society woman's mansion for the benefit of the city's poor kids.

For a first-timer in his film debut, Spanky had quite a bit of screen time. Before his arrival in Hollywood, young McFarland was a famous face to Dallas residents with his face slathered on highway billboards and in print ads hawking Wonder Bread. McFarland's aunt sent in photos of the cute kid to Hal Roach Studios after spotting a magazine ad stating a need for new child actors for his 'Our Gang' series. A screen test in the spring of 1931 impressed Roach so much he made McFarland the youngest ever to appear in his Rascals. According to McFarland, he received his stage name Spanky from the director of "Free Eats," Robert McGowan. "My first director hung that nickname on me," McFarland remembered. "He said I looked 'spankable.'" In another interview, however, McFarland claimed a newspaper reporter gave him the moniker. Wherever the name came from, McFarland would be forever known as 'Spanky.'

"Free Eats" was inspired by Tod Browning's 1925 "The Unholy Three," featuring a midget in the guise of a baby who steals from wealthy people. In the Our Gang short, two midgets dressed as babies are a front for their supposed parent, simply named 'common thief' (Billy Gilbert, who's a familiar face for Laurel and Hardy fans.). The older baby was played by "Tiny" Lawrence in his only film role. The other, with a deep dubbed voice, was Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus veteran Clarence Chesterfield Howerton, whose most famous role was as a Munchkin in 1939's "The Wizard of Oz." Coming across these crooks, Spanky, who is accompanied by his friends, delivers a long monologue telling a story to his buddies. Director McGowan let the cameras roll to capture the rookie actor's cute rambling tale. As he grew older, McFarland became the leader of the rascals, and retired from the "Our Gang" series ten years later.
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5/10
Little Rascals vs. thieves in disguise in this comic short
Leofwine_draca23 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
FREE EATS is an odd little Our Gang comedy with more of a plot than usual, although I found the comedy to be a bit unsatisfying in places, and sometimes crude (a lot of humour arising from characters eating and getting covered in food in the process). Still, it's short and to the point, and the sight of the Little Rascals doing battle with a criminal gang is novel to say the least.

This film wins points for featuring Billy Gilbert in a likable turn as a character who turns out to be a criminal gang leader. The material in which midgets pretend to be babies is quite odd and the one-liners never quite zing as they do elsewhere, although Stymie and his buddies do their best. It's average, overall.
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4/10
The Rascals catch a gang of jewelry thieves
Horst_In_Translation16 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Free Eats" is an American 19-minute short film from 1932, so this one is from the early days of sound film, but of course it is still a black-and-white movie. This was done by McCarey and Walker and everybody with an interest in film from the first half of the 20th century will know this duo for their collaborations not just with Our Gang, but also with icons like Stan and Ollie or the Stooges. But back to this one here. There is a bit of a party and a gang of crooks dress up as babies in order to manage stealing expensive jewelry from the guests. It all works out well, but luckily the Rascals are invited too and they manage to help the cops catch the thieves. There is a bit more crime in this one and a bit less pure comedy than usual, but it's nothing too different from the Rascals' regular routine. This is one of the films where Stymie is pretty much in the spotlight more than usual. One of the antagonists is played by the famous Billy Gilbert, but his character is also one of the reasons why this film is not working that well. It always felt as if he'd be the last guy to catch, but at the end he just disappeared. Honestly the comedy is also almost never working in here and this can be said about many other Rascals' short films. Tottering ears may have been really funny back then, but honestly this approach to humor has not aged well at all. By today's standards, these slightly under 20 minutes are not worth checking out anymore and it says nothing positive about Our gang if this is one of their more known works. Watch something else instead.
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