Just Rambling Along (1918) Poster

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6/10
Solo Stan, at the dawn of a great career
wmorrow5915 November 2001
Early in his stage career Stan Laurel worked as an understudy to Charlie Chaplin, and a strong Chaplin influence is obvious in several of Stan's solo appearances. Just Rambling Along is one of his earliest surviving works, a lightweight, modest one-reel comedy that offers only a hint of the great clown Laurel would become -- and more than a hint of Chaplin. Stan certainly looks odd here: his hair is plastered down flat, and dark makeup is smeared around his pale blue eyes in order to accentuate them, but this only makes them look paler. Frankly, he looks eerie. Stan's screen character isn't very appealing, either. He's a layabout who takes a coin from a small boy, steals food, etc., like the early Chaplin of the Keystone comedies.

Stan is more of a ladies' man in these early films, but also something of a "masher," following any pretty girl he sees and throwing himself at her. In this film as in the later short A Man About Town, some of the humor comes from Stan's efforts to chase after the girl and the girl's efforts to rid herself of him. On this occasion they wind up in a cafeteria, which provides Stan with opportunities for comic business using food, table implements, etc. The gags seem random, as if improvised while the cameras were grinding. Stan borrows Chaplin's bit from the restaurant scene in The Immigrant, using salt & pepper shakers as binoculars, but when Charlie performed the gag it felt appropriate (he was making fun of Henry Bergman's florid gestures) whereas here it just feels forced; Stan's doing it because he needs to do something funny. It's better, and funnier, when Stan samples almost all the food on offer, but orders only a cup of coffee. Just Rambling Along is of modest interest for silent comedy buffs, but serves primarily as evidence that Stan needed the partnership with Oliver Hardy to fully come into his own.

Casting notes: according to one reference source the cook behind the counter is Charley Chase, but I'm inclined to believe it's Charley's look-alike brother James Parrott, sometimes known as Paul Parrott, who later starred in his own solo series of short comedies and eventually directed some of Laurel & Hardy's best films. The big cop who chases after Stan is Noah Young, who was featured in a number of Harold Lloyd shorts and features, while the chef is played by Bud Jamison, a rotund character actor who played in support of every major comedian of the era: everyone from Chaplin, Langdon and Keaton to the Three Stooges. Stan and Bud have a nice scene together in this film, and at one point Stan appears to break character and laugh at something Bud has said. I wish we knew what it was!
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5/10
Watchable early Stan Laurel short
planktonrules31 July 2006
Okay, this Stan Laurel film is far from great and a very far cry from the films he did with Oliver Hardy. However, when you compare it to other solo comedy shorts from the same period, this one is pretty good and has a few cute scenes plus it is far better than the slapstick films a decade earlier because this one at least has a plot (many earlier comedies didn't). But don't expect any magic here--just a few mildly funny scenes were Stan tries to sneak out of paying a restaurant bill or avoid a cop. Stan's timing on his own isn't bad but you can see why in this and other solo shorts he made he wasn't a first tier star. The policeman, by the way, was Noah Young--and you may have seen him in many of Harold Lloyd's films, as they did a lot together.
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6/10
Laurel's earliest surviving work
lee_eisenberg5 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
About a decade before he and a certain mustachioed, corpulent actor became a comedy team, Stan Laurel starred in this simple, lighthearted comedy. "Just Rambling Along" features the future weepy member of L&H trying to woo a woman, only to see his plans backfire.

The scene where the nervy young man tries to play a trick with the receipt reminds me of a trick that I understand both Saul Alinsky and Abbie Hoffman recommended as a way to live for free. But here obviously it's just for laughs. The short is nothing special, but still a fun look at Stan's early career.
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Of Interest As A Glimpse Of Stan Laurel Early in His Movie Career
Snow Leopard17 January 2006
This is of interest mainly for the chance to see Stan Laurel in one of his early movies. The material itself is neither good nor interesting, and it gives Laurel and the rest of the cast little to work with, but even so Laurel's talent is visible when he has the opportunity to show it. Laurel is teamed with Clarine Seymour, whose once-promising career was cut short by a fatal illness in 1920. Not many of her movies survive, making this also of some interest for those who remember her.

Unfortunately, the story in this feature is generally inconsequential, illogical, and not very funny. What little there is relies on the appeal of Seymour's character and the amoral scheming of Laurel's character. The gag ideas are, honestly, not very imaginative, with most of them being imitations of Chaplin gags or of other material that was already familiar from many other movies of the era.

Yet even with weak material to work with, if you watch Laurel you can see that his timing is expert, and his screen presence is good. His own style was still largely based on his music-hall background, and the rest here is forced upon him by the nature of the material. It's not his fault (or Seymour's) that this particular movie is not very good.
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6/10
Just Rambling Along is one of Stan Laurel's earliest works for Hal Roach
tavm3 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Just Rambling Along is, according to some sources, the second comedy Stan Laurel made for Hal Roach when he was a partner in the Rolin Film Company ("Ro" stands for Roach). It basically follows Stan as he first tries to steal a wallet from a boy next to him (even though the wallet was found lying in the sidewalk by both) before being discovered by the boy's cop father. He then follows a pretty woman with a bunch of bench sitters to a restaurant where the woman offers to pay everyone except Stan. The female manager throws Stan out where, at the entrance, Stan discovers the boy with his back turned. Stan manages to cover the boy's eyes and tells him to stick 'em up as he manages to steal the quarter the boy's dad gave him. He comes back in and shows the manager the quarter and after she welcomes him back in and turns around, Stan pantomimes kicking her before she turns back. Meanwhile, the pretty woman and the bench-warming followers find tables to sit down with the woman standing back up every time other men go to where she is sitting. After she finds her own place, Stan samples many of the chef's food. When he orders a cup of coffee, the chef turns around with a cup as Stan puts many of the displayed food in his pocket. With only one item on his plate displayed, the female cashier charges on his receipt the 25 cents. Stan then goes to the pretty lady and seems to flirt with her with the reply being a glass of water on his face! He pantomimes swimming and comes back to the counter where he briefly takes his hat off and unknowingly gets a couple of pancakes tossed in it by the cook who is also unaware of what happened. As Stan goes back to pretty woman's table, she points to his hat. Stan, thinking it's her head she's referring to, looks over her hair. After taking his hat off, the woman leaves and so does Stan. However, she has his receipt and vice versa, so while she has paid her meal, Stan is short on his! He sneaks out before seeing the boy and his cop dad back at the entrance so he sneaks back in. They throw him back out where the cop and son exact revenge! The end. Laurel's music hall experience came in handy with many of the gags I've just described. Hardly a classic, Just Rambling Along displays the English comic trying anything he can think of to get laughs and succeeds more times than not even though he is not yet the character he developed with Hardy a decade later. Certainly worth a look to anyone interested in this beloved comic's early works.
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6/10
Does what it says on the title card
hte-trasme5 September 2009
"Just Rambling Along" is a very slight but thoroughly entertaining little one-reeler. Stan Laurel, very early in his career and his association with the Hal Roach, plays a poor trickster who steals money from a child in order to have lunch with a pretty woman. Stan's character is nothing like the fully-formed and comically brilliant "Stanley" he would later play, but he does demonstrate an ability to create a character and create humor from character within the space of a ten-minute film. In fact, it's this drawing of comedy from a blend of character, situation, and inspired gag, even in its nascent form, that gives even this breezy little short the hallmark of Stan Laurel.

The sequence in which a troupe of men follow Stan's new girlfriend into the cafeteria is not too amusing and a bit of a waste of time, but happily the short's most extended sequence is its best: Stan's brilliant business of sneaking food on the lunch line while pretending to reject every dish.

This film is a fascinating curio for showing the young Stan Laurel at the very start of his film career. It's almost a wonder it survived, but I'm very glad it did.

The moral of the story for Stan: if you see a wallet lying on the ground, don't point it out to the kid sitting on the sidewalk.
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2/10
What blue eyes you have, Stanley!
F Gwynplaine MacIntyre6 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Nearly everything I was prepared to say about the early Stan Laurel comedy 'Just Rambling Along' turns out already to have been said in the perceptive comments by IMDb reviewer "wmorrow59". Morrow is indeed correct that Laurel's business with the salt and pepper shakers is cribbed from a Chaplin gag in 'The Immigrant'. Morrow is also correct that the cop in this movie is played by Noah Young. On my own, I'll note that 'Just Rambling Along' was produced by Rolin Films, the production company in which Hal Roach was half-partner (the 'Ro' in 'Rolin' was short for 'Roach'). When Roach went into solo production, Noah Young came with him and remained a stalwart support for Harold Lloyd, Snub Pollard and other Roach comedians.

However, with respect to reviewer Morrow, Laurel's stint as Chaplin's understudy in the Fred Karno troupe was hardly the low point of his career. After leaving Karno, Stan Laurel paid his dues in some pretty awful music-hall acts: "The Rum 'Uns from Rome" with fellow Karno alumnus Arthur Dandoe, followed by the even worse act "Fun on the Tyrol" featuring Laurel with two non-entities named Ted Leo and Bob Reed. During Chaplin's early film stardom at Keystone, Laurel toured American vaudeville with married couple Edgar & Ethel 'Wren' Hurley (both of them also from the Karno troupe) in a turn billed as 'The Keystone Trio', with Laurel impersonating Chaplin's tramp, Wren Hurley as Mabel Normand and her husband imitating Chester Conklin as a Keystone Cop. The act split up when Edgar Hurley wanted to swap roles with Laurel.

As reviewer Morrow correctly notes, when Laurel looks directly into the camera in close-up, the effect is genuinely eerie. Morrow does not give the reason for this: the pupils of Laurel's eyes were pale blue, and they happened to be precisely the colour that was insensitive to the early orthochromatic film stock. (Actress Lee Remick's eyes were the same shade, but during her career a panchromatic film stock was used.) When Laurel looks into the camera, his eyes look ghostly ... and the effect is so weird, it negates any comedy. In a television interview decades later, shortly before his death, Laurel recalled being told that he would never make it as a film actor because his eyes were the wrong colour. However, from Laurel's behaviour during this interview, he clearly seemed to be unaware of the genuine technical problems incurred by his eyes, and he seemed to think that the complaint about the colour of his eyes was merely a pretext (by people who thought he lacked talent) to let Laurel down easily without pricking his vanity.

Briefly glimpsed in 'Just Rambling Along' is Marie Mosquini, a brunette beauty who -- unlike so many other 1920s actresses -- remains astonishingly beautiful by modern (early 21st-century) standards of feminine beauty. After teaming with Snub Pollard in some of his best silent films, Mosquini married radio engineer Lee DeForest ... who helped develop the talking-film process.

'Just Rambling Along' contains some plot business that (with my British cultural references) I didn't understand, but which an American friend explained to me. I had often heard the phrase 'meal ticket' as a slang term, but was unaware of its literal meaning. In 'Just Rambling Along', Laurel cadges a meal in a working-class restaurant that used the now-obsolete device known as meal tickets: each time he selects a dish, another charge is totted onto his meal ticket, with payment expected afterward. Chaos ensues (but not much comedy, alas) when Laurel's meal ticket is swapped for another with a higher total on it.

I laughed precisely once during 'Just Rambling Along', when a cupful of water is thrown into Laurel's face and he pantomimes swimming away. Chaplin did that gag too. I'll rate this movie just 2 points in 10, mostly for its historical significance.
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6/10
Not too bad
TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews27 June 2010
This was part of a 3-DVD box-set, and this disc came with the other Laurel and Hardy shorts Mud & Sand, Oranges and Lemons, The Tree in a Test Tube and the Three Stooges ones Brideless Groom and Sing a Song of Six Pants; it also came with Malice in the Palace, and the features Atoll K(or Utopia) and Flying Deuces. I don't know if more than one cut of this exists, but my version was about eight and a half minutes. However, the thing itself is really 6 and 35, as the first 120 seconds were dedicated to a text intro about the female lead(and her tragic early death), Laurel taking over for... Toto?, and how this is different from the man's 20's work. Not having watched a lot of what he later made, I can't really say if that's accurate or not. This is a pretty decent effort. The situation is easy to relate to(men wanting to impress an attractive woman), and the gags largely feel natural(it's a restaurant, so of course a few tables are going to get smashed). Among the funniest moments in this are the clever jokes in the "dialog"(written, not spoken... this is silent). The slapstick is inoffensive, the "violence" the cartoon brand, where no one seems to "actually" have gotten hurt. While this is nothing special, it is a fine enough short. I recommend this to any fan of Stan. 6/10
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5/10
Clarine Seymour is a very "pretty lady"
kidboots18 July 2008
Special mention should be made of Stan Laurel's adorable leading lady. She is Clarine Seymour and the next year, 1919, she would be on her way to stardom as D.W. Griffith's latest discovery. She would have roles in "The Girl Who Stayed Home" and "True Heart Susie" and even when the film was among Griffith's worst ("Scarlet Days") her reviews were always glowing. Sadly she died at just 21 while filming "Way Down East" and her role was taken over by Mary Hay.

In "Just Rambling Around" she plays a pretty little scam artist, who not only entices patrons to the diner where she works but switches meal tickets with the love struck "nervy young man" (Stan Laurel) so he is forced to pay for her meal (he doesn't!!!). This series had originally starred Toto the Clown but when he left the Rolin Film Company with a film owing, Stan Laurel inherited it as well as Toto's leading lady.
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7/10
Stan Laurel's Earliest Surviving Movie
springfieldrental12 September 2021
One of cinema's most famous comedic duos was Laurel and Hardy. Few know the two didn't team up until the late 1920's despite each having long movie careers before they were linked up forever in film lore.

Stanley Jefferson, aka Stan Laurel, made his earliest extant film, November 1918, "Just Rambling Along." A relatively newcomer to movies, Stanley had debuted in front of the camera for a demo film in late 1917 before the 28-year-old vaudeville performer was hired by Universal Picture's Carl Laemmle to play in April 1918's "Hickory Harem."

Son of an English theater manager, Stanley began as a stage pantomimist whose early claim to fame was being an understudy for young Charlie Chaplin during an American tour with The Fred Karno Troupe in 1913. Stanley Jefferson stuck around the United States after the tour and formed with two other Karno alumni "The Three Comiques," playing a Chaplin imitation. Stanley belonged to another trio act before meeting Mae Dahlberg, becoming an entertaining vaudeville couple. It was Mae who shortened Jefferson's first name to Stan. Their schtick was Mae always beating up a subserviant Stan. During a Los Angeles performance, a film producer saw their act and made a demo film seen by Laemmle and Chaplin. The former signed Stan to a Universal Pictures' movie contract in early 1918. The comedian's early screen persona was a mixed bag which really didn't solidify until he teamed up with Oliver Hardy in 1928.

Oliver Hardy had been in movies much earlier than Stan. Born Norville Hardy in Harlem, Georgia to a former Confederate soldier wounded in the Battle of Antietam, Hardy adopted his father's name Oliver as a teenager (his dad died one year after Norville was born). He worked as a Milledgeville, Georgia movie theater manager for three years before he was convinced he should be in films. Journeying to nearby Jacksonville, Florida, where the Lubin Manufacturing Company had a film studio branch there, the 21-year-older worked as a vaudeville singer in the evenings while beginning his movie career in an April 1914 debut, "Outwitting Dad." The 6-foot one-inch 300-pounder was in demand partly because his girth, earning him the nickname "Babe." His earliest surviving film is November 1914's "The Servant Girl's Legacy," the 22nd short for the Lubin Company.

By 1917 Hardy made the trip to Los Angeles, working for Vitagraph Studios. He played mostly villains during his employ with the studio, a departure from the roles he played in his early days in Jacksonville and in his later movies with Laurel.
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Nice Early Film with Stan
Michael_Elliott8 March 2016
Just Rambling Along (1918)

*** (out of 4)

A beautiful woman (Clarine Seymour) walks past a rather nerdy looking man (Stan Laurel) and he decides to follow her into a café. The man has no money so he must not only steal some money but also steal some food so that he can sit next to the woman.

This Hal Roach directed comedy isn't going to be mistaken for a masterpiece but I think fans of silent comedies and fans of Laurel should enjoy it. Obviously when people think of Stan they think of his work with Oliver Hardy but he had well over a decades worth of work before the duo teamed up. This here is one of his earliest films and I think he does a very good job here with the comic timing. Just check out the scene where he keeps stealing food for an example. There are some nice laughs throughout so this is certainly worth watching.
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