Film Review
Time was fast running out for Laurel and Hardy when they came to make
A Chump at Oxford. It was the last but one
film they made for Hal Roach before their far from successful move to
MGM and Twentieth Century Fox, where a succession
of lacklustre comedies such as
Jitterbugs (1943) and
The Big Noise (1944)
hastened their departure from the big screen. Despite their long and profitable
collaboration, Roach and his legendary comedy double act were keen to
part company - Roach wanted to move onto more serious pictures, Stan
and Oliver wanted more artistic freedom. By separating, both
sides unwittingly secured a rapid and ignominious decline for
themselves.
A Chump at Oxford
and
Saps at Sea (1940)
would be the last gasp for a comedy partnership that, to this day, is unrivalled in
its global impact and longevity.
A Chump at Oxford was
originally conceived as a forty minute long streamliner, a short film
that would accompany a feature film on its cinema release. To
make the film more marketable in Europe, a twenty minute prologue was
tagged on to it, making it a standalone feature, the version in which
it is usually shown today. This prologue is a reworking of Laurel
and Hardy's classic short
From Soup
To Nuts, with Stan Laurel once again dragged up to the nines as
the maid Agnès. This addition not only makes the premise
of Stan and Ollie's arrival at Oxford more plausible but gets the
comedy snowball rolling faster than in the original featurette.
The film has one big minus - an interminable mid-section in which the
duo wander aimlessly around in a maze, being taunted by a tedious bunch
of undergraduates (one of whom is the future horror icon Peter Cushing). It
also has one big plus, which just about redeems this minus: Stan
Laurel's transformation into the ear-wiggling academic super-hero Lord
Paddington. It appears that Stan is not the simpleton we have
been led to believe but an intellectual powerhouse that is admired by
the world's greatest thinkers, even Einstein!
In one of the most hilarious and revealing sequences of any Laurel and
Hardy film, we see the power balance in Stan's relationship with his
friend suddenly reversed. Now it is Ollie who is the underdog,
taunted by a supercilious master, who rebukes him for even the
slightest misdemeanour. Do we like this new Stanley?
Absolutely not. Laurel's portrayal of the arrogant upper-class twit is
so nuanced and convincing that we long for the loveable old Stanley to
return. And when he does, and the two old friends are happily
reunited, we are understandably delighted.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Down to their last six dollars, Stan and Ollie are reduced to posing as
a husband and wife to secure the post of butler and housemaid to the
wealthy Vandeveers. Needless to say, Stan and Ollie's attempts to
help out at a dinner party end disastrously and the duo are soon back
in the gutter looking for work. Employed as street cleaners, they
accidentally thwart a bank robbery and are rewarded by the grateful
bank's owner with the thing they crave most, an education. Where
better to study than Oxford, the town of dreaming spires and sparkling
intellects. As soon as they arrive at their college, Stan and
Ollie fall prey to a gang of undergraduate pranksters. Having
been tricked into losing their way in a maze, the hapless freshers are
then invited to make themselves at home in the Dean's living
quarters. When they finally make it to their own college rooms,
Stan is recognised by his valet as Lord Paddington, the University's
most accomplished scholar and sportsman. Ollie dismisses this
fanciful notion, unable to believe that his dim-witted sidekick could
ever have had such a distinguished past. But when Stan is
hit on the head by a falling window he undergoes an immediate and
dramatic transformation. Lord Paddington has returned...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.