EARLY TO BED
T. it.: Le ore piccole. F.: George Stevens, Len Powers. M.: Richard Currier. Int.: Stan Laurel (steward), Oliver Hardy (owner). Prod.: Hal Roach per Hal Roach Studios. DCP. D.: 21’. Bn.
Film Notes
The real horror of Laurel & Hardy can be found not in the gothic of Do Detectives Think? or Habeas Corpus, but rather in power relations. When Oliver receives news of a sizeable inheritance, Stan wails desperately: “What will become of me?”. Dry your tears, Stan! Ollie cannot give up having you by his side… you can be his butler. No longer friends united in poverty, but rather master and servant. The result is the duo’s cruellest and most unexpected film, in which Oliver plays a genuine tyrant ready to play the dirtiest of tricks. All of the gags are the result of sadistic and violent gestures and contain a physical and psychological charge that makes a mockery of the slightest hint of rebellion (or healthy attempt to break free). We can’t believe our eyes – and nor, in the end, can Stan, who is incapable of resigning himself to a friendship betrayed. We vainly grasp at the notion that it might all be nothing more than a nightmare. When even this most tenuous of hopes evaporates, we do not laugh, we cannot. Laurel & Hardy do not dance together in order to undermine the very fabric of society but rather perform a toxic paso doble that reflects class conflict. In their second year, the duo prove that they are already mature enough to explore alternative endings, unsettling multiverses, parallel dimensions. There is no way out, only anger and frustration, in a suffocating and unjust film in which even a pie in the face can assume sinister connotations.
Alessandro Criscitiello