The Frozen Limits (1939) Poster

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7/10
A Misplaced Chamberlain
bkoganbing18 November 2008
After getting thrown out of their last job and finding employment scarce in the United Kingdom, the six members of the Wonder Boys, better known as The Crazy Gang see an advertisement for employment in the gold strike town of Red Gulch in the Yukon Territory. It's from a newspaper clipping and on the back there's a story about Chamberlain saying the country better be prepared for war. Off they go to the Yukon and The Frozen Limits.

By the way, it's case of misplaced Chamberlains. The clipping is forty years old and it refers to Joe Chamberlain and the Boer War rather than Neville in the current crisis. But that's typical of how things go for this crew. I can see Stan Laurel making the same mistake.

Of course when they get there it's a ghost town inhabited only by young Jean Kent and her grandfather Moore Marriott. He's getting on in years and is a bit touched in the head. Marriott's got a gold mine that he's misplaced somewhere that he goes to in his sleep, that is when he's sleepwalking. The Gang better help him find that mine or otherwise pretty Ms. Kent won't marry stalwart trapper Anthony Hulme, but rather saloon owner Bernard Lee, a fate worse than death.

This was my first exposure to the Crazy Gang and I can see both why they were so acclaimed in the UK and why they never made any impact across the pond. The jokes come fast and furious and then were a number of things that the Code in the USA just wouldn't allow. The jokes are also strictly topical British and a lot just wouldn't be gotten over here.

The sight gags are universal, the final chase scene is worthy of anything that the Marx Brothers did in America. My suggestion is that if you watch The Frozen Limits, tape it if you have a working familiarity with British history and run it two or three times just to make sure you pick up everything. It will be worth it.
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6/10
An amiable little comedy
planktonrules9 December 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Before I found this film on DVD, I had never heard of The Crazy Gang...and I assume most outside the UK could say the same thing. This group of six comedians apparently took a burlesque style act to the big screen. While there is quite a bit I didn't like, the overall effort was pleasant and watchable. However, these guys will not make you forget Abbott & Costello (whose roots in were American burlesque). Style-wise, they are a lot like Bud and Lou, actually--infused with the energy of the Marx Brothers. This makes their humor far from sophisticated, but what they lack in style, they make up for with high energy. My biggest complaint about the men in that with six, there isn't a whole lot of chance for them to develop unique personalities. Still, the film makers did manage to make the most of this, doing a very cute parody of "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs"--something you sure can't do well with smaller comedy teams!

The film finds the Crazies in their native land trying to entice suckers to come in and see their act. However, they are flat broke and no one is interested. Suddenly, one of the Gang finds a newspaper article about a discovery of gold in the Yukon and off they go to strike it rich--not realizing the newspaper is 40 years old! Once in the town mentioned in the paper, they find it deserted except for a crazy old man and his sweet daughter. The two take in the Gang and feed and lodge them. In gratitude, the guys come up with a scheme to help their benefactors--pretend that there is gold along various places owned by the pair--knowing that suckers will jump at the chance to buy their land. Now there really is gold...one piece. So, they recycle the same piece again and again until finally the suckers catch on and want to hang them! To avoid the rope, one of the guys eventually agrees to get married--something you really need to see to believe.

All in all, the film had some nice moments, though there were quite a few flat ones. My favorite bits were the Snow White section as well as the singing Mounties. My biggest criticism of the Gang was that they spoke way too fast. It wasn't that I couldn't understand them with their accents--it's just that the delivery was forced and I think it would have been a bit funnier if they'd slowed down a little. Still, I liked it enough that I'd be happy to see another one of their films--though they are as rare as hen's teeth to find.
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The Crazy Gang's best film
The Crazy Gang were three sets of comedy double-acts who separately got star billing in Britain's variety halls, and who occasionally got together onstage (or in films) as a six-man comedy troupe. The most popular team in the act were Flanagan and Allen, who (deservedly) get the most footage in every Crazy Gang film. Bud Flanagan was a large raucous East Ender, similar to Stanley Holloway. Chesney Allen was handsome and well-spoken: he could have had a film career as a leading man, but he retired at a young age and was replaced in the Crazy Gang by "Monsewer" Eddie Gray, an unfunny dialect comedian with a phony handlebar moustache. Some of Flanagan and Allen's cross-talk routines are similar to Abbott and Costello's routines. In "The Frozen Limits", when Allen mentions "gold ore", Flanagan asks: "gold or WHAT?" (Another English comedy team from the same period, Jewel and Warriss, came much nearer to imitating Abbott and Costello.) In their stage act, Flanagan and Allen sang sentimental ballads between their comedy routines.

The second double-act in the Crazy Gang were Nervo and Knox. Teddy Knox was a dapper man with a pencil moustache. Early in "The Frozen Limits" he dresses up as a woman, using a handbag to hide "her" moustache. Jimmy Nervo came from a family of circus performers; he never learnt to read or write but he was too vain to admit this. During rehearsals for the Crazy Gang's films, he would always claim he'd left his reading-glasses at home, and Knox (who knew his secret) would read Nervo's lines for him until Nervo knew them off by heart. Nervo was the boyish member of the Crazy Gang; during one scene in "The Frozen Limits" he impersonates a child. The least interesting double-act in the Crazy Gang were Naughton and Gold, two short Scotsmen who look like William Frawley and speak with thick Glesga accents.

"The Frozen Limits" is the Crazy Gang's best film, full of antics and lunacy. At one point they do an audacious spoof of Disney's "Snow White", even whistling "Hi-Ho, Hi-Ho, It's Off to Work We Go". There's also a very funny song, "Always Getting Our Man", performed by a camp chorus of Mounties on horseback.

Some of the jokes in "The Frozen Limits" will go right past American viewers. Lines like "I must spend a penny" and "Mother Brown's got her knees up" are very funny to me, but Yanks won't know the cultural references which make these lines so funny. The film also includes references to Joseph Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain, council housing, and so forth ... which are clearly MEANT to be funny, but which are inaccessible to Americans.

Bernard Lee, best known as "M" from the James Bond films, gives a fine performance here as the villain. Also noteworthy is Moore Marriott, an elderly comic actor who gave impressive support to nearly every major British comedian of the 1930s.

"The Frozen Limits" is so funny, you'll enjoy it even if you miss half the jokes ... and it's a delightful artefact of wartime Britain.
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8/10
This one is in the Garden Of My Heart
Spondonman2 January 2006
After 10 viewings in 20 years I too think this was the Crazy Gang's best effort on film, with more cohesion in the plot than their next best, "Alf's Button Afloat". They were indeed a crazy trio of double acts thrown together mainly on stage, sometimes in front of royalty, until Chesney Allen retired in the '40's through "ill-health". He outlived them all by years. Apparently they were just as mad outside "work", regularly playing practical jokes on one another.

The Six Wonder Boys troupe head for I'll-Get-Her-To-Tell-Me (Alaska) to dig for the gold that was being found there. It seemed a better idea than going to Mansfield ... because they'd been there. When they get to Red Gulch they find their information was a mere 40 years out of date - they thought that the chips that were in the guilty newspaper they'd read tasted funny. But by then it doesn't matter as they've all fallen in love with Snow White and want to help her grandad find his long lost stash of gold. Baddie Bill "M" McGrew wants it himself however.

The number of verbal and visual puns is astonishing, but most of them will probably only make sense(?) to Brits and ex-pats interested in seeing '30's British b&w comedies. Imho nearly all of the gags and routines work, including the Gold If patter between Bud & Chesney and the "Whistle While You Work" pastiche - even the "Always Getting Our Man" Mountie inserts. A marvellous little film, in a rather tired looking condition but utterly recommended.
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8/10
THE FROZEN LIMITS (Marcel Varnel, 1939) ***1/2
Bunuel197616 December 2007
I had never read much about (or even seen stills of) the six-man British comedy group The Crazy Gang, but my positive experiences with their contemporaries Will Hay and Arthur Askey – and especially Graham Greene's high praise of THE FROZEN LIMITS itself ("The funniest English picture yet produced…it can bear comparison with SAFETY LAST and THE GENERAL") – made me take the plunge with the bare-bones R2 DVDs from Network of this and their subsequent film GASBAGS (1941; see below), both of which were released earlier this year with virtually no fanfare.

A British-made Western is a rarity, but a British Western spoof is rarer still (CARRY ON COWBOY [1965] was still some 25 years away). Incidentally, going back to the Silent classics mentioned by Greene, the film seems to me to be more obviously indebted to THE GOLD RUSH (1925) and WAY OUT WEST (1937). Besides, it also plays like a variation on the "Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs" fairy-tale (which had just been immortalized on the screen via Walt Disney's animated masterwork) and where the seventh member is played by ancient comic and frequent Will Hay foil Moore Marriott; the Gang actually call pretty heroine Eileen Bell by that name throughout, and there's even an amusing sequence with the six of them preparing to go to bed and whistling the dwarfs' song from the Disney film!

Six comedians (three sets of comedy duos: Flanagan & Allen, Nervo & Knox and Naughton & Gold) may be the largest such grouping on film – though not all of their personalities emerge here: my favorites were big Bud Flanagan (looking a bit like Jim Backus), straight man Chesney Allen and moustached, squeaky-voiced Teddy Knox; however, bald Charlie Naughton often took the limelight – since he's the one on which the others always seemed to pick on. Still, it's Marriott who steals the film from his very first scene – where he contrives to impersonate every official in the dilapidated theater of a ghost town!; a very young Bernard Lee is also notable as the villain of the piece.

The Ore routine between Flanagan and Allen actually anticipates Abbott and Costello's famous "Who's On First?" (the film, in fact, hinges on a lot of wordplay for its humor – which doesn't necessarily travel, especially at this juncture). Nevertheless, there are several hilarious sequences throughout – a few of which even brought tears to my eyes: the opening scene where the Gang are defrocked by a band of angry creditors; their dressing up as Indians once they hit the Yukon; the Gang's ruse to make everybody rich with the same piece of gold; they all impersonate the sleepwalking Marriott to confuse the villains (a gag which may owe its origin to the Marx Bros.' hilarious mirror sequence in DUCK SOUP [1933]); the spot-on theater sketch which pokes fun at hoary melodramas; the surreal moment when, pursued by the villains, one of the Gang climbs a staircase that is part of the painted scenery in the theater; and especially towards the end, when a group of singing Mounted Police gallop ever so slowly to the Gang's rescue (despite being egged on by the increasingly impatient Ranger hero).

The thinny soundtrack and the frantic nature of the gags themselves made it hard for me to get all the jokes sometimes – subtitles would certainly have been welcome in this case. The Crazy Gang only made five films – with the first two also being well-regarded, O-KAY FOR SOUND (1937) and ALF'S BUTTON AFLOAT (1938), and a much later reunion (though Allen had, by this time, bowed out due to ill-health and been replaced by Eddie Gray) called LIFE IS A CIRCUS (1960; directed by Val Guest who, incidentally, co-wrote both Gang films I purchased as well as some of the afore-mentioned Hay and Askey vehicles!).
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8/10
The Wonder Boys & The Other Gold Rush.
hitchcockthelegend20 March 2010
The Frozen Limits is a big screen vehicle for the artists known as The Crazy Gang. They were a group of British entertainers who formed in the early 1930s. In the main the group's six men were Bud Flanagan, Chesney Allen, Jimmy Nervo, Teddy Knox, Charlie Naughton and Jimmy Gold. Hugely popular in the variety halls the group were also darlings of the then Royal Family. The plot here sees them as the Wonder Boys troupe who set off to seek their fortunes in Alaska after reading about a gold rush in the newspaper. Only problem is is that when they finally get to Red Gulch it turns out they are 40 years too late!

I often cringe when I see the statement "it's very British" because it implies that those not of the British Isles may struggle to get it. The reason it bothers me is because in this www/internet age I have garnered a ream of non British film loving friends who have been known to split their sides at the best of Ealing, Will Hay and the imperious Terry-Thomas. So, then, is it true that something such as The Frozen Limits is unlikely to be appreciated by a non British audience? Well yes it's true, so much here is topically British, but really it has to be said that the classic movie fan is pretty well versed in history, and when all is said and done the visual mirth here is universal. With the anarchic "not" so wild west make over an absolute winner. A winner that has every chance of being more appreciated by an American audience now than it will be by a British audience. Not all the comedy works, and in truth the "big 6" are trumped big time by a film stealing Moore Marriott. But there are skits and parodies here that deserve respect and a nod of approval from more illustrious comedy acts. You are unlikely to nearly fall off your chair like I did because of an Ovaltine gag, but if you be a classic comedy film fan? I feel sure that you will at the worst acknowledge there's some very talented people at work here.

Now then, does the Mounties always get their man? 8/10
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