Occasionally a few jokes
and gags will be re-used, but each episode finds the Stooges in
the role of different characters and with unexpected jobs. In “Some
More of Somoa” the trio are tree surgeons – intent on
avoiding taking up employment in a field already parodied. In “How
High is Up” they become riveters; in other episode they’re
plumbers, doctors, census takers, cooks, icemen, beauty salon owners,
army men and more. “Nutty But Nice” has the group struggling
to get a sick child to laugh (unsuccessfully), which is especially
ironic since their adventures are so immature it’s possible
that only adults will find them funny. Of course, nostalgia helps
too.
They pretend to be insane, avoid Indians in the Rockies, unintentionally
brutalize four young women in a ramshackle beauty salon (perhaps
the episode in which they come the closest to killing anyone),
spike punch with alum, try desperately to go to jail and engage
in a riotously grand pie fight. In “No Census, No Feeling”
the three airheads accidentally become census takers while trying
to avoid the law, end up at a bridge game, and finally transition
to running through a live football game. Several of the episodes
in these two years have the most complex and unrelated plotlines
merging into a single adventure – which has us question
whether they were originally intended to be multiple shows.
The majority of Disc Two finds the Stooges getting mixed up in
scatterbrain antics that have no real resolutions and often shift
from location to location while ignoring characters and plots
already half developed. But no matter how unlikely, how nonsensical,
or how irresolute their many escapades turn out to be, it’s
still impossible not to laugh when Larry loses a handful of hair,
Curly barks at the ladies or Moe gets knocked out by some deadly
instrument.
- Mike Massie