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Woman Haters (1934)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
5 May 1934 (USA) moreTagline:
A Musical Novelty morePlot:
The stooges join the "Women Haters" club and vow to have nothing to do with the fair sex. Larry marries... more | full synopsisUser Comments:
Their first for Columbia is far from their best moreCast
(Complete credited cast)| Moe Howard | ... | Tom (as Moe) | |
| Larry Fine | ... | Jim (as Larry) | |
| Curly Howard | ... | Jack (as Curley) | |
| Marjorie White | ... | Mary |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
21 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
Black and WhiteAspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Mono (Western Electric Noiseless Recording)Certification:
Australia:GFun Stuff
Trivia:
This was the first short the Three Stooges made with Columbia, explaining why certain aspects of the short are very different from what they normally did. moreGoofs:
Boom mic visible: In the scene near the end of the film that takes place in the Woman Haters Club meeting room, as the camera moves from the chairman down the table to the door, the shadow of the boom mic moving with it can be seen on the far wall of the room. moreQuotes:
Mary's father: [talking to match the background music] That reminds me of a story, listen.[points to a fat woman]
Mary's father: That's my other daughter there. When on her wedding day, the fella she was about to marry, tried to run away. Did you ever hear of a nerve like that? Well, I took care of that guy. In a room I locked him, then I socked him right in the eye.
[points to a cop]
Mary's father: Then I turned him over to my brother, the cop. He just picked him up. And spinned him round like a top.
[points to a tall strong guy]
Mary's father: Then my other brother, who's a fighter, began. Seemed ashamed to tell you what he did to that man.
[Jim looks frightened]
Jim: Did he marry your daughter?
Mary's father: Did he? I should say he did.
[...]
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Notable mainly as the first short the Stooges made for Columbia, their characters aren't very fully developed here--Larry, for example, is much more aggressive in this than in pretty much any other Stooge short, with the possible exception of "Punch Drunks", and Curly's voice is actually quite a bit lower than we're used to. Even allowing for all of that, though, this is really a very strained effort. The gimmick of rhyming the dialogue may have seemed clever at the time, but it gets old quickly. It has its moments--thanks mainly to the Stooges' physical comedy skills and the vivacious Marjorie White, who is terrific and would have made a great foil for the Stooges had she not been killed in a car accident a year or so after this film was made, but overall it's just not particularly good. It obviously struck a chord with audiences, though, as Columbia made 190+ more of them with the boys, so we can be thankful for that.