THE SECOND HUNDRED YEARS

Fred Guiol

T. it.: I due galeotti. F.: George Stevens. M.: Richard Currier. Int.: Stan Laurel (Little Goofy), Oliver Hardy (Big Goofy), James Finlayson (governatore Browne Van Dyke), Tiny Sandford (guardia), Frank Brownlee (direttore della prigione), Charlie Hall (detenuto). Prod.: Hal Roach per Hal Roach Studios. DCP. D.: 22’. Bn.

info_outline
T. it.: Italian title. T. int.: International title. T. alt.: Alternative title. Sog.: Story. Scen.: Screenplay. F.: Cinematography. M.: Editing. Scgf.: Set Design. Mus.: Music. Int.: Cast. Prod.: Production Company. L.: Length. D.: Running Time. f/s: Frames per second. Bn.: Black e White. Col.: Color. Da: Print source

Film Notes

The first outing in which they are officially billed to the public as Laurel & Hardy demonstrates the extent to which the duo were the real creative force behind their films. If Fred Guiol’s direction holds the story together, the leads seize every opportunity to build a steady crescendo of gags. In The Second Hundred Years it is a simple change of costume that determines the course of events. They begin in a novel guise as jailbirds, with haircuts that they retained for a successive cameo in the Max Davidson vehicle Call of the Cuckoo; but it only takes a change of outfit for them to pass themselves off as house painters, or the acquisition of two elegant suits for them to become unlikely French officials, playing on simple stereotypes (co-authored by the ever- faithful James Finlayson). In the midst of this orchestrated chaos, the sequence in which they attempt to prove their credentials by painting the entire city white produces in socially challenging speeches (both within and without the diegesis) awkwardly disguised as misunderstandings.

Alessandro Criscitiello

Copy From

Restored in 2023 by Blackhawk Films from a 16mm reduction print from the camera negative produced by Robert Youngson in 1957, now in the Jon Mirsalis collection, and a reduction fine grain. Additional materials include a 35mm nitrate fragment preserved by Library of Congress and a 35mm fine grain of the compilation film The Golden Age of Comedy, preserved at Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Blackhawk Collection)