Garry Moore Movies
Hoping to cash in on the success of Robert Youngson's silent-film compilations, Jay Rocky and His Friends Ward put together this compendium of scenes from the comedy films of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. Produced in association with Hal Roach (the team's longtime "boss"), Crazy World of Laurel and Hardy isn't quite as satisfying as the Youngson films, partly due to the uninspired handling of the material, partly because of the hokey narration by Garry Moore. Many Laurel and Hardy classics--Help-Mates, The Hoose Gow, Our Wife, Going Bye-Bye--are represented only in fleeting snippets. We are treated to more generous samplings of the L&H shorts Bacon Grabbers (1929), Beau Hunks (1931), Any Old Port (1932), The Music Box (their 1932 Oscar-winner), Towed in a Hole (1932), Busy Bodies (1933) and Dirty Work (1933). Also displayed to good advantage are selections from four of Stan and Ollie's feature films: The Bohemian Girl (1936), Way Out West (1937), Swiss Miss (1938) and Block-Heads (1938). Crazy World of Laurel and Hardy is not the best means of introducing Laurel and Hardy to non-buffs, though admittedly this compilation gets large, long and loud laughs when shown in a packed movie house. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
This music performance video offers a history of jazz in Chicago, including performances by some of Chicago's greatest. ~ Tana Hobart, All Movie Guide
Doris Day stars in a true-to-type performance as Jane Osgood, a spunky, pretty, wronged widow with two children. She manages her own lobster business, and the railroad has just trashed a shipment, killing them off before they could ever be properly boiled to death for someone's dinner. Jane commissions her lawyer (and potential romantic partner) George Denham (Jack Lemmon) to take on the railroad and its nefarious owner, Harry Foster Malone (Ernie Kovacs). Thus, the battle between the unjustly treated Jane and the arrogant railroad boss begins. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Doris Day, Jack Lemmon, (more)
This video contains episodes from two popular television quiz shows from the 1950s. Do You Trust Your Wife starred the talented Edgar Bergen and his wooden counterpart Charlie McCarthy while I've Got a Secret featured host Garry Moore. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
This documentary chronicles the history of modern-day kibbutz life and problems of the Beit Shean Valley. ~ All Movie Guide










