The Three Stooges return with the next 24 digitally remastered shorts covering the years 1949-1951 in this sixth collection, which continues with Shemp as the third Stooge, who had stepped in two years earlier to fill the ... more »shoes left empty when Curly became ill and retired. This collection contains such classics as "Merry Mavericks" (1951), a reworking of "Phony Express" (1943) featuring Red Morgan and his gang of bandits; "Self Made Maids" (1950), in which the Stooges not only play themselves but assume the roles of their fiancées, their fiancées' father (played by Moe) and their three babies; and "Don't Throw that Knife" (1951), which features Larry, Moe and Shemp in brilliant improvisation with nothing but household items while confined to a single room. The Three Stooges Collection Volume 6 showcases Larry, Moe and Shemp at their best -- and things just keep getting better!« less
Actors:Moe Howard, Shemp Howard, Larry Fine Genres:Westerns, Comedy Sub-Genres:Westerns, Comedy Studio:Sony Pictures Format:DVD - Black and White,Color,Full Screen,Widescreen DVD Release Date: 06/16/2009 Release Year: 2009 Run Time: 6hr 30min Screens: Black and White,Color,Full Screen,Widescreen Number of Discs: 2 SwapaDVD Credits: 2 Total Copies: 0 Members Wishing: 4 MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated) Languages:English
A must for people of this era but be warned that the sound and film quality is lousy and the plotlines are not great if others want to check it out.
4 of 5 member(s) found this review helpful.
Movie Reviews
Probably the final set of great Stooges shorts
calvinnme | 04/04/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This set contains:
1949
The Ghost Talks
Who Done It?
Hokus Pokus
Fuelin' Around
Malice in the Palace
Vagabond Loafers
Dunked in the Deep
1950
Punchy Cowpunchers
Hugs and Mugs
Do pey Ducks
Love at First Bite
Self-Made Maids
Three Hams on Rye
Studio Stoops
Slaphappy Sleuths
A Snitch in Time
1951
Three Arabian Nuts
Baby Sitters Jitters
Don't Throw That Knife
Scrambled Brains
Merry Mavericks
The Tooth Will Out
Hula La La
Pest Man Wins
These shorts are from the era when the Stooges were comprised of Larry, Moe, and Shemp. These are the probably the last of the great Stooges shorts. With television encroaching upon the motion picture industry, cost cutting measures were soon underway. One such measure taken at Columbia that had already impacted MGM and other studios was the decrease in scope of the short-subject department in 1952. Stooge short veterans producer Hugh McCollum and director Edward Bernds were casualties of this action, and this left only Jules White behind as a person in the short subject department with a feel for what made the Stooges special. Shooting schedules were shortened, old Stooge shorts were cut up and recycled into sparse new material, and fans were not fooled by all of this.
Do be aware that the first six volumes of the Three Stooges will be available in June on The Three Stooges Collection, Volumes 1-6 Bundle. This really is not a great buy, but is pretty much on par with what you pay for all six volumes when they are on sale. This might be the way to go if you don't have any of the volumes yet."
The Peak of the Shemp Years
Joshua Downham | Muncie, IN United States | 04/10/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The Three Stooges Collection, Vol. 6: 1949-1951 contains the following 24 remastered shorts, many of which are making their DVD debut:
1949:
The Ghost Talks
Who Done It? (originally intended to be a Curly short titled 'Pardon My Terror' and it shows)
Hokus Pokus
Fuelin' Around
Malice In The Palace (Of the four public domain stooge shorts, this one's probably my favorite. Curly made another cameo as a chef, but it was cut out of the film and Larry played the part.)
Vagabond Loafers (A remake of A Plumbing We Will Go with some old footage reused for the new version.)
Dunked In The Deep
1950:
Punch Cowpunchers
Hugs and Mugs
Dopey Dicks
Love At First Bite
Self-Made Maids (The 3 Stooges played all of the roles in this unique short.)
Three Hams On Rye (features the coughing up feathers gag from 'Uncivil Warriors')
Studio Stoops
Slaphappy Sleuths
A Snitch in Time
1951:
Three Arabian Nuts
Baby Sitters' Jitters
Don't Throw That Knife (The stooges hiding in a jealous husband's home in 'What's the Matador?' was the inspiration for this short.)
Scrambled Brains (This hilarious short makes probably the best argument that Shemp was not a poor replacement for Curly. Shemp naysayers should definitely watch this, one of Larry's favorite shorts.)
Merry Mavericks
The Tooth Will Out (If you're afraid of going to the dentist, you may want to skip this one. There's lots of drilling!)
Hula La-La
The Pest Man Wins (A remake of 'Ants In The Pantry')
In my opinion, this collection will easily be the best of the Shemp volumes. These were the peak years for Shemp and most of the funniest shorts he made with Moe and Larry will be included. The quality will begin to dip in volume 7, with the departure of director Edward Bernds and screenwriter Elwood Ullman, but there are still enough funny shorts to make up for it like Corny Casanovas, Three Dark Horses, Gents In A Jam, Goof on the Roof, etc. Decreasing budgets and increased use of stock footage will make volume 8 a flawed set, but some of the remakes like Bedlam In Paradise and Creeps actually improve upon the originals and the rare solo Shemp shorts will be great to watch. Volume 9 will be for diehards only, but home to several rarely shown shorts like A Merry Mix-Up, Horsing Around, and Flying Saucer Daffy. If a volume 10 is released, hopefully it will not include the insult Stop! Look! and Laugh!. Snow White and The 3 Stooges was a 20th Century Fox film, so it wouldn't be included, though the exclusion of that technicolor mistake wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing.
"
The Stooges with Shemp at their height. Guaranteed laughs fo
Scott MacGillivray | Massachusetts, USA | 04/08/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Sony has been doing The Three Stooges proud in its continuing series of restored and remastered DVD editions. Volume 6 is highly recommended for comedy fans and a must for Stoogeheads. Many of the 1949-51 films benefit from witty scripts and direction, and are exceptionally funny.
The best shorts here were produced by Hugh McCollum and directed by Edward Bernds, who soft-pedaled the gratuitous roughhouse and allowed Shemp, Larry, and Moe to improvise freely. This brings new freshness to the standard slapstick format, and shows how professional and resourceful Howard, Fine, and Howard were. (You'll see many amusing instances when a scene is supposed to be over, but Bernds keeps the camera rolling to see what the Stooges will do.) The films also benefit from Columbia's resident stock company of the late 1940s: the lovely Christine McIntyre and Jean Willes, both equally adept at playing sincere heroines and crafty schemers; the suave Kenneth MacDonald, a definitive villain; the versatile Emil Sitka, appearing here in any number of guises; veteran comic Vernon Dent, playing the Stooges' foil with his usual authority; expressive comedian Dudley Dickerson ("This house has sho' goan crazy!"), and the superlative stuntman Jock Mahoney. It isn't easy to steal an entire film from the Stooges, but watch Mahoney in the clever PUNCHY COWPUNCHERS; you'll roar as he indulges in some athletic and hilariously clumsy slapstick.
Many of the Stooges' best-remembered scenes are included in this set: the pie fight, the spooky old houses inhabited by gangsters or mad scientists, the "plumbers" routine, "the window ledge," "the cats in the piano," "the talking suit of armor," "the feathers in the cake," the Santa Claus masquerade, the "dance instructors," the trio singing at least two variations of "Just Plain Jane," the Stooges playing themselves AND their own girlfriends... and the gags just keep on coming! There is so much quality material in these films that producer-director Jules White consulted them frequently in the 1950s, borrowing entire sequences and sometimes the complete storylines for later Stooge shorts.
Be advised that a few of the shorts will stop at nothing for a cheap laugh, thanks to the heavy hand of director Jules White. MALICE IN THE PALACE has some unfortunate stereotypical humor and a tasteless gag involving a meat cleaver. In BABY SITTERS' JITTERS White shows a toddler endangered by both the Stooges and by a loaded gun. But such lapses are rare in this set; most of the material is a joy for Stooge fans.
This DVD set should surpass Columbia's former VHS releases, which weren't as comprehensive, and occasionally were technically inferior (at least three titles derived from 16mm prints). The recent DVD volumes have been sparkling, and Volume 6 should be no exception."
The Combo of Moe, Larry, and Shemp Might have been the BEST!
Michael Paul Sebek | Georgia, USA | 05/11/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This volume contains some of my favorite Stooges shorts, especially: The Ghost Talks (with the voice of Phil Arnold as Peeping Tom), Malice in the Palace (with the Emir of Schmo), and Three Arabian Nuts (with the Genius of the Lamp). However, I don't agree that this is the best of the Shemp volumes. For me, that title easily goes to Volume 5, with the hilarity of Brideless Groom, Sing a Song of Six Pants, Squareheads of the Round Table, Fiddler's Three, Shivering Sherlocks, and A Crime on Their Hands. These six shorts are EASILY among the best the Stooges ever made. Curly was beloved and was a comedic genius in his own right; however, the more I watch the Shemp shorts, the more I'm thinking that the best combination of Stooges might have been Moe, Larry, and Shemp."
Prime Shemp Comedies!
Paul J. Mular | San Carlos, CA USA | 04/09/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Anyone who thinks Shemp was not a fine comedian in his own right is probably basing this on the weaker Shemp comedies of 1954 & 1955 (Cuckoo On A Choo Choo). And if they were not weak new stories, they were re-issuing an old short with a few minutes of new footage.
But this set will contain Shemps best work. The writers as well as the Stooges were ready to keep the series going with Shemp's different comic abilities. What really makes these work is that Shemp did not try to be Curly (like some of the other third stooge replacements), Shemp was allowed to be himself. And he added a new set of signature routines. How many of us would do a fake snore with the "Bee Bee Bee Bee" sound at the end. That was a Shemp thing, not Curly.
And since Shemp was the original third Stooge in the Ted Healy days, we are really looking at the original Three Stooges act!
I do find it interesting watching these in original release order, it is obvious that Columbia put some on the shelf while releasing others. For example: 1950's DOPEY DICKS & LOVE AT FIRST BIGHT clearly have title styles pre-dating 1949's VAGABOND LOAFERS as well as having 1949 copyright notices. They were obviously held back while VAGABOND LOAFERS, DUNKED IN THE DEEP, PUNCHY COWPUNCHERS & HUGS AND MUGS got released.
Holding back releases was not unusual and it got more common in the later 1950's. Consider that Shemp died in 1955, but his shorts continued to be released in 1956 (not counting the shorts that Joe Palma impersonated Shemp in long shots)."