Film Review
Of the three feature-length operettas that Laurel and Hardy made for
Hal Roach, the one that is most loved and has stood the test of time
best is
Babes in Toyland,
which is now better known as
March
of the Wooden Soldiers (to avoid confusion with the 1961 Disney
film). Loosely based on Victor Herbert's popular operetta of the
same title,
Babes in Toyland
was a personal favourite of Oliver Hardy and is a film that appeals as
much to children as it does to adults. This is a timeless musical
comedy set in the fantasy world of our childhood imagination, a land
where nursery rhyme characters are vividly brought to life and where
our heroes face their most powerful adversary, an army of rampaging
hirsute bogeymen. It has all the charm and magic of that other
fantasy classic,
The Wizard of Oz (1939), with
the added bonus of being much funnier.
Ironically, this is the film which permanently soured Stan Laurel's
relationship with his producer Hal Roach, creating the rift that would
ultimately see them part company on bad terms just when Laurel and
Hardy were at the height of their popularity. Roach had
originally envisaged
Babes in Toyland
as a lavish production, with big name actors and his comedy duo
relegated to support roles as Simple Simon and the Pie Man. Stan
Laurel refused categorically to have any part of this and so the idea
was shelved. When the film was finally made, several months
later, it was still one of the most ambitious that Roach ever made, a
nine-reel picture that included five musical numbers and some of the
largest and most elaborate sets to have been erected in his studios.
Babes in Toyland may be one of
Laurel and Hardy's most popular features, but it is also one of their
most atypical films. Stan and Ollie appear not in their familiar
vagabond-like guise but as doll-like toy-makers, each sporting an
improbable toy-town costume and an even less probable wig. They
do not get the opportunity to tickle our ribcages with one of their
famous set-piece slapstick routines; virtually all of the comedy arises
naturally from their situation and the plot. This is not to say
that Stan and Ollie's comic abilities are not exploited to the
full. The script makes good use of the duo's talent for visual
comedy and does not depart from their established love-hate
relationship, which is the basis for much of their humour.
In contrast to many of their subsequent features, Laurel and Hardy are
not reduced to an incidental support act. They may be part of an
ensemble, but here they are at the heart of the plot, not stooges
sitting on the sidelines. We do not even mind that so much of the
runtime is taken up with other characters, since they are all played
with gusto by a likeable cast. Henry Brandon makes a deliciously
evil pantomime villain, skulking about the sets like something out of a
German expressionist horror movie. Charlotte Henry and Felix
Knight are delightful as the star-crossed Bo-Peep and Tom-Tom, even if
they do end up being out-staged by a variety of toy animals that
include a bear-sized cat, three house-proud pigs and an enterprising
Mickey Mouse look-alike (who was actually a real-life monkey in a mouse
outfit).
Far from being a soppy children's fairytale,
Babes in Toyland is a sophisticated
dark-edged comedy that has as much to offer an adult audience as it
does a child audience, one of those rare films that really does appeal
to the whole family. Who can ever forget the climactic battle in
which Stan and Ollie team up with a battallion of toy soldiers to fight a
rampaging hoard of bogeymen? Or the cute little mouse parachuting
to safety when his airship gets caught in the crossfire?
This film is a joy and a marvel. Watch it when you are a child
and the chances are that you will still want to watch it when you are
well into your nineties. Like all great fables,
Babes in Toyland is both timeless
and ageless.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Stannie Dum and Ollie Dee are a pair of happy-go-lucky apprentice
toy-makers in Toyland. They live in a giant shoe with kind Mother
Peep and her daughter Bo, who is forever mislaying her sheep. One
day, Mother Peep is visited by Silas Barnaby, a mean-hearted man who
threatens to evict her and her tenants unless she pays her
mortgage. Knowing that the old woman has no money, Barnaby plans
to pressurise her into letting him marry her daughter. When they
hear of this, Stannie and Ollie decide to help Mother Peep by
persuading their employer to give them the money she needs.
Unfortunately, Stannie has mixed up an order for a Mr S. Claus and
built one hundred six foot toys soldiers by mistake. Having been
dismissed for incompetence, Stannie and Ollie then attempt to steal the
mortgage document from Barnaby, but this fails spectacularly and the
two are arrested for burglary. To prevent her friends from being
exiled to Bogeyland, Bo-Peep has no choice but to marry Barnaby, even
though she has lost her heart to a handsome young piper, Tom-Tom.
Just when all appears lost, Ollie has a brainwave...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.