The Finishing Touch
- 1928
- 19m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
The boys are contracted to build a house in a day but they have many mishaps and run into trouble with the nearby hospital staff, due to their excessive noise.The boys are contracted to build a house in a day but they have many mishaps and run into trouble with the nearby hospital staff, due to their excessive noise.The boys are contracted to build a house in a day but they have many mishaps and run into trouble with the nearby hospital staff, due to their excessive noise.
Edgar Kennedy
- Cop
- (as Ed Kennedy)
Sam Lufkin
- Owner of the House
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Clyde Bruckman
- Leo McCarey(supervising)
- Writers
- H.M. Walker
- Stan Laurel(uncredited)
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe final gag, in which the boys' truck slams into the house, was a misfire. The script called for the truck to drive all the way through the house, but the carpenters had not built the house to property man Thomas Benton Roberts' specifications, so the truck was unable to penetrate it completely. Rather than rebuild the house for one gag, the cast and crew chose to keep the end gag as filmed.
- GoofsAt the beginning of the film, a van is rolling downhill before being caught. As it stops a crew member is visible outside the cab on the driver's side, controlling the van.
- ConnectionsEdited into Laurel and Hardy's Laughing 20's (1965)
Featured review
Early knockabout with Stan & Babe
This is Laurel & Hardy the way most people like to remember them: as day laborers in denim, hard at work on a construction project which is, of course, doomed. Here they are "finishers" who have promised a homeowner they can complete work on his house for $500. The house happens to be located near a hospital, so a cop and tough nurse must persuade the boys to work quietly. Within this loose framework of a plot the guys are free to wreak havoc on the house, the cop, the nurse, and each other.
The Finishing Touch was made early in the L&H partnership, and is enjoyable if you're in the mood for basic slapstick knockabout. There are a lot of great gags here, but somehow this slapstick lacks the deft assurance -- the finesse, if you will -- of their later films with similar setups, such as Hog Wild or Busy Bodies. As contradictory as it sounds, the boys became more expert at portraying ineptitude as they "matured." Later on, too, at least in their best work, the gags seemed to occur spontaneously; here, some of the material feels rather forced. Prime example: Ollie repeatedly swallows a handful of nails due to his insistence on carrying them in his mouth. Now, even in low comedy, you need a more plausible set-up than that. Does any builder carry nails around in his mouth? Having swallowed one mouthful, would he do it again? Ollie is too dumb here. This is the sort of flaw one expects to find in their much later movies from the '40s, when the team was being mishandled by unsympathetic studio hacks. Laurel & Hardy should be simple and childlike, but not moronic.
Mr. Laurel comes off best in this film, getting lots of mileage out of his magnificently blank expression. He has two especially nice bits: first, when his awkward attempt to hoist a window frame into position results in the frame gradually falling to pieces; and next, when he frightens himself into believing he's lost one of his fingers. Stan could do so much with moments like that.
Also on the plus side, The Finishing Touch offers the sparkling cinematography of George Stevens, as well as several estimable supporting players: Dorothy Coburn as The Tough Nurse, Edgar Kennedy as The Ineffectual Cop, and Sam Lufkin as The Very Unhappy Homeowner. Lufkin figures prominently in the film's spirited finale, when it becomes clear that, despite assurances, the house is not "built like Gibraltar." Lufkin tries to retrieve the paycheck he's given the boys, but they fend him off with ingenuity and vigor. It's the best scene in the picture, a warm-up for the crazed Grab-the-Deed routine in L&H's 1937 masterpiece Way Out West, and a delight to watch.
The Finishing Touch was made early in the L&H partnership, and is enjoyable if you're in the mood for basic slapstick knockabout. There are a lot of great gags here, but somehow this slapstick lacks the deft assurance -- the finesse, if you will -- of their later films with similar setups, such as Hog Wild or Busy Bodies. As contradictory as it sounds, the boys became more expert at portraying ineptitude as they "matured." Later on, too, at least in their best work, the gags seemed to occur spontaneously; here, some of the material feels rather forced. Prime example: Ollie repeatedly swallows a handful of nails due to his insistence on carrying them in his mouth. Now, even in low comedy, you need a more plausible set-up than that. Does any builder carry nails around in his mouth? Having swallowed one mouthful, would he do it again? Ollie is too dumb here. This is the sort of flaw one expects to find in their much later movies from the '40s, when the team was being mishandled by unsympathetic studio hacks. Laurel & Hardy should be simple and childlike, but not moronic.
Mr. Laurel comes off best in this film, getting lots of mileage out of his magnificently blank expression. He has two especially nice bits: first, when his awkward attempt to hoist a window frame into position results in the frame gradually falling to pieces; and next, when he frightens himself into believing he's lost one of his fingers. Stan could do so much with moments like that.
Also on the plus side, The Finishing Touch offers the sparkling cinematography of George Stevens, as well as several estimable supporting players: Dorothy Coburn as The Tough Nurse, Edgar Kennedy as The Ineffectual Cop, and Sam Lufkin as The Very Unhappy Homeowner. Lufkin figures prominently in the film's spirited finale, when it becomes clear that, despite assurances, the house is not "built like Gibraltar." Lufkin tries to retrieve the paycheck he's given the boys, but they fend him off with ingenuity and vigor. It's the best scene in the picture, a warm-up for the crazed Grab-the-Deed routine in L&H's 1937 masterpiece Way Out West, and a delight to watch.
helpful•120
- wmorrow59
- Mar 16, 2002
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Последний штрих
- Filming locations
- Cheviot Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA(the hospital scene at 2728 McConnell Drive)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime19 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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