Why Girls Love Sailors (1927) Poster

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6/10
A bunch of tough sailors are reduced to mush by a boy named Willie, in drag
wmorrow5914 February 2006
Anyone who chooses to watch this short expecting to find a typical Laurel & Hardy comedy is in for a surprise, for although both gents appear in Why Girls Love Sailors, this film was made before they'd developed into the team we recognize—which is putting it mildly! Here we find Oliver Hardy as an unshaven roughneck, first mate on a decrepit cargo boat, described in a title card as "the nastiest brute on board," a guy who flings sailors overboard if he thinks they've insulted him. Stan is introduced as Willie Brisling, "the great periwinkle fisherman," and yet he plays a character somewhat closer to the one we know, grinning vacantly and even bursting into tears at one point. Stan has an amusing scene at the beginning, flirting joyously with his fiancée Nell (Viola Richard, a Clara Bow look-alike who was one of the cutest actresses on the Hal Roach lot). As it happens, the captain of Ollie's ship, the "Merry Maiden," is an ex-boyfriend of Nell's who abducts her and hauls her on board with evil intent, and it's up to Stan to rescue her. He does so by disguising himself as a woman and vamping most of the crew, including first mate Ollie and the captain himself.

I must say, this short qualifies as one of the weirdest silent comedies I've seen, whether featuring Laurel, Hardy, or anyone else. It's funny at times, but there are quite a few moments that leave me bewildered. When Stan first boards the ship there's a bit involving a sailor played by Jerry Mandy; Stan pulls his sweater over his head and cavorts strangely, apparently intending to confuse the man. It works, but the point of the scene was lost on me. Then Stan finds a clothes trunk from the "Jules Ellenge Theatre" filled with women's clothing; this was obviously meant as a reference to then-famous female impersonator Julian Eltinge, and indeed Stan soon emerges from the trunk in drag. Is it improper to ask why this trunk was on board in the first place? It's implied at the beginning that the crew of the Merry Maiden are smuggling booze, but are they smuggling transvestites as well?

Some of the funniest bits involve Stan's impact on the crew members, each of whom is instantly smitten at the sight of him. Stan and Ollie get their one extended scene together during this portion of the film, and although Stan would don drag on several later occasions in their career together, the guys never played a scene like this one again. Things turn really bizarre when Stan starts vamping the captain, and his angry wife (Anita Garvin) shows up unexpectedly. She finds her husband holding Stan in his lap, making hanky-panky. She pulls a gun and is ready to plug her spouse, and at first Stan is elated, but when she makes it clear that she intends to punish them both Stan whips off his wig, reveals his true gender, and announces that this was all a test "to see if you really love him."

And how does she react? She's embarrassed! She sheepishly lowers the gun, quickly apologizes to her husband for doubting him, and embraces him! This astonishing moment is followed by a other strange twists before we reach the final fade-out gag. I don't know about anyone else who's seen this, but I'm still trying to process that "testing your love" bit. My guess is that the filmmakers had to come up with an ending in a hurry and decided to just wing it with something really silly. Whatever the case, Why Girls Love Sailors may not be everyone's cup of tea, but it's well worth a look for the Curio Factor alone. At any rate, I'll wager you won't be bored!
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6/10
Long-Lost L&H comedy
BJJ-226 February 2005
WHY GIRLS LOVE SAILORS was a lost film for many years until it turned up in a French Film Archive in 1971.It took another 15 years for the film to be viewed again,but happily it is now readily available on DVD and Video,with the French subtitles translated into English.

So,do Stan and Ollie work as a team here? Not really,though they do share one scene towards the end as Stan(called Willie Brisling here)tricks Ollie(billed as the First Mate)into thinking he's a woman,though he's actually trying to rescue his girl who's been kidnapped by the Ship's captain(Malcolm Waite).Anita Garvin,who was not thought to have appeared in the film until it's rediscovery,steals the show as the Captain's irate wife.Interesting more historically than aesthetically,but still watchable.
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7/10
Considering that this was BEFORE Laurel and Hardy became a team, it's pretty good.
planktonrules4 May 2008
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were both under contract with Hal Roach Studios in the late 1920s. However, they were not a team but separate acts who just happened to appear in some movies together before Roach realized they would make a good team. Because of this, most of the films they made in 1927 didn't have the same chemistry as later films and they often worked against each other in the films--being enemies such as in SAILORS BEWARE, FROM SOUP TO NUTS and this film. While these were pretty good films, they really don't seem at all like Laurel and Hardy films.

In WHY GIRLS LOVE SAILORS, Stanley's girlfriend is kidnapped and taken aboard a very rough boat filled with some tough characters--one of the meanest of which is first mate, Oliver Hardy. Ollie looks very different in this film--without the trademark mustache and sporting a very stubbly face. Plus, it's one of the few films from 1927 on where he was a real villain--something he did regularly in his earlier films. Since Stanley can't possibly overpower the entire crew, he uses his wits (and a dress) to outsmart them--leading to an eventual "boss battle" with the captain at the end of the film.

This film excels due to good writing, some clever gags and because it's so gosh-darn different. Fans of the team are encouraged to find this one and see a truly unusual Laurel and Hardy film.
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7/10
Fun pre-team L&H silent comedy
andy stew25 July 2001
Like a lot of Laurel & Hardy's silent movies, you need to be in the right frame of mind to view them – i.e. you need to watch them not expecting the usual huge quota of belly laughs found in Laurel & Hardy films. I watched this film expecting to be, as is usually the case, reduced to a shivering wreck, but was slightly disappointed. However, when I watched it again, I was surprised at how much I was laughing, especially at Stan's little display at the start of the film to impress his love, and at his excellent capacity for drag later in the film. Oliver Hardy is, as usual, brilliantly underplaying his role and is suitably menacing as the 'heavy', and the little scene he shares with Stan is charming, sometimes touching, making one wonder why it took as long as it did for them to be paired.

This is a little delight of a film, which is made even better (as are all the silent films) with the addition of wonderful recreations of the Shields and Hatley tunes by the Beau Hunks orchestra – those who own a copy of WHY GIRLS LOVE SAILORS on VVL as I do are fortunate enough to have these marvellous little melodies playing in the background; if you don't, buy the CDs and play them while you're watching. It makes an already pleasurable experience that little bit more enjoyable.
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7/10
Laurel and Hardy ahoy
TheLittleSongbird3 August 2018
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were comedic geniuses, individually and together, and their partnership was deservedly iconic and one of the best there was. They left behind a large body of work, a vast majority of it being entertaining to classic comedy, at their best they were hilarious and their best efforts were great examples of how to do comedy without being juvenile or distasteful.

'Why Girls Love Sailors' is nowhere near classic Laurel and Hardy, later films, short and feature, had stronger chemistry when fully formed and used their considerable talents better. At this point, Laurel was much funnier and more interesting while Hardy in especially the previous two outings of theirs had too little to do. 'Why Girls Love Sailors' is still worth watching though and is an improvement on the previous two short films, along with 'Duck Soup' it was Laurel and Hardy's best up to this point.

Personally would have liked more sly wit, more scenes with Laurel and Hardy together and Hardy having more screen time.

The story is a bit busy at times and both slight and formulaic.

Laurel however is very funny, and sometimes hilarious, like as was said for their previous outing 'Love Em and Weep', 'Why Girls Love Sailors' is worth seeing for him alone. Anita Garvin is up to his level too. Despite saying above about Hardy's screen time being too short he is at least not wasted, and he does give one of his funniest and most interesting appearances of his pairings with Laurel up to this point. There is not enough of him and Laurel together and one can see glimpses.

A good deal of the humour is well timed, hugely energetic and very funny, with everything going at a lively pace, and there is a lot of charm and good nature to keep one going. 'Why Girls Love Sailors' looks quite good as well.

To conclude, decent. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
Rough and Ready - Like Ollie's Character...
JoeytheBrit6 February 2010
Another film with a seafaring theme, although no boats leave the harbour. Stan and Ollie aren't a double act as such in this one: Ollie's a rather rough-and-ready looking first mate with a perpetual scowl, while Stan's engaged to a woman to whom the Captain of Ollie's boat takes a shine.. The captain kidnaps the woman, so Stan follows him aboard to claim her back.

This is an OK silent film which is lifted immeasurably by the presence of Laurel & Hardy, even if their double act isn't yet developed. After pretending to be a ghost, Stan disguises himself as a woman. He did that in quite a few of their films. As a woman he looks rather odd, all neck and thin legs, but the sailors aboard ship all seem enchanted by him/her. He lures them to a secluded part of the boat then, after knocking them out with a bottle, tricks Ollie into throwing them overboard. This isn't one of their best but, as always with Laurel & Hardy, it's worth a look.
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6/10
Yep...typical, though well done L & H; Anita Garvin steals the show, though...
mmipyle13 March 2021
"Why Girls Love Sailors" (1927) is a two-reeler with Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy eating the scenes, along with Anita Garvin, Viola Richard, and Malcolm Waite, all in a tizzy when captain Malcolm Waite brings his boat into port and goes to see former girl friend Viola Richard, but she's now engaged to Laurel. Oops, and Waite's a toughie - and he shows it! Now back on the boat with both in tow, Richard basically captive and Laurel in a position to be eaten by the sharks who run the boat, especially the captain and his first mate, Hardy, Laurel decides to show what a man he can be by dressing up as a woman and ensnaring all the men on the boat... Then... Things get in high gear and things begin to happen: Bing, bong, bunk, Although the boat's not sunk, The sailors are beaten And though not eaten, By Laurel are thwarted While the captain's sorted Out by his wife, A knife Named Garvin.

My print is the American print found in France in 1971, long thought lost forever. After I watched this print, I watched the French version which differs here and there. Some of the scenes are obviously other takes, plus Charles R. Althoff shows up for about 1 second in a shot in Laurel's abode on shore. The viewer can just see him before he's out of the scene, sitting in a chair at the bottom of the screen. I mention this because he's not in the American print at all! Plus - several others were in scenes originally that had been deleted before release, including Anna May Wong and Sôjin Kamiyama. Althoff's presence is never explained by the syntax of the film, nor would many care. The titles in French differ only marginally from the American ones.

This is on the Image Entertainment DVD release of several years ago.
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5/10
Why Girls Love Sailors
jboothmillard26 October 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy are the most famous comedy duo in history, and deservedly so, so I am happy to see any of their films. On the boat Merry Maiden the crew are loading boxes for nasty bully First Mate (Hardy, with stubble), well, not as nasty as the Sea Captain (Malcolm Waite). On little smelly Sugar Bay, Willie Brisling (Laurel) and fiancée Nelly (Viola Richard) are looking lovingly, she gets a new necklace, and he falls over all over the place in excitement. The Captain sees Nelly through the window, and after he has poured water down Willie's top, he kidnaps Nelly taking her to his boat, and traps Willie in some netting. When Willie manages to get out, he lands on the boat, while Nelly is held in what looks like the study, but she gets out shooting a gun. Willie first pretends to be headless with his jumper to scare a crew member, jumping about like a ballet dancer, and the crew member with the First Mate unintentionally end up kicking the Captain, the crew member gets black eyes in one second. Willie avoids the First Mate, and changes in a costume box to dress as a woman, and in this disguise he lures one by one other crew members, hides them behind the hut, knocks them out, and makes the First Mate throw them overboard, thinking their throwing things and hitting him. Eventually Willie in his disguise gets caught blowing a raspberry by the First Mate, there is a little flirting and play fighting, and when the First Mate wants a kiss, Willie makes him close his eyes to get away. His eyes open, and he ends up pinching the bottom of the Captain's Wife (Anita Garvin), getting a kick on the backside and a punch in the face. Willie has found Nelly with the Captain, and in disguise he gets on his lap being all flirty until the Captain's wife comes in looking mad. When she makes threats, Willie takes off his disguise, the Captain ends up getting shot, and the happy couple get away with their over garments shot off. Filled with good slapstick and all classic comedy you want from a black and white film, it is an enjoyable silent film. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were number 7 on The Comedians' Comedian. Worth watching!
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4/10
Stan as a blonde curly female, not sure I like it or hate it
Horst_In_Translation2 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"Why Girls Love Sailors" is an American short film from the days of black-and-white silent movies, which is not too surprising as this one is way over 90 years old already now. The director is Fred Guiol long before his Oscar nomination and the writers are Roach and Walker, some known names for sure especially back in the day. But the big stars here are Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, even if they do not come in this one the way they usually do. Still, it runs for approximately 20 minutes like most their works. The difference is really that Stan is the lead actor here with by far the most screen time and it seems as if they were trying to build him up like one of the greats Keaton, Chaplin, Lloyd etc. The material sure fit that idea. And Hardy? Well, he is there, but really just a supporting character with one scene in the first half early and one early in the second half. The latter he shares with Laurel, but they are far from peers. Hardy plays the first mate on a ship where Laurel is getting busy with his girl when the captain abducts her. The rest of the film is basically Laurel trying to find her and get her back. And it seems pretty unusual how witty he acts to achieve his goal at times. Oh well, you could also say how stupid everybody else acts I suppose. I mean that literally every man on the ship falls for his drag costume? Oh my. Some funny moments result from it, but most of it feels rather unrealistic and for the sake of it. I would say the film started okay, but got a bit worse. Laurel crushing on the girl early on certainly felt pretty cure in my opinion. He pulls off the character in my opinion, but given his talent, this should not surprise anybody. But not even the best actor can really make a weak story like that work and I felt the longer the film went, the worse it became. So my suggestion is to skip it unless you really love Stan and Ollie, who were by the way also already in their mid-30s and late 30s, so far from young, even if this is way before their glory years and career peak. Watch something else instead, even if beardless and scruff-looking Hardy was something else too.
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