Our Relations

1936

Action / Comedy / Family

16
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 82% · 100 ratings
IMDb Rating 7.3/10 10 3444 3.4K

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Plot summary

Two sailors get caught in a mountain of mix-ups when they meet their long-lost twins. Laurel and Hardy play themselves and their twins.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
December 10, 2018 at 08:29 AM

Director

Top cast

Virginia Grey as Pirate's Club Customer
Alan Hale as Joe Grogan -Denker's waiter
Oliver Hardy as Oliver 'Ollie' Hardy / Bert Hardy
Stan Laurel as Stan Laurel / Alf Laurel
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
581.85 MB
946*720
English 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 11 min
Seeds 1
1.11 GB
1408*1072
English 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 11 min
Seeds 5

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by classicsoncall 7 / 10

"I wouldn't say yes, and I wouldn't say no".

Laurel and Hardy double the fun here as a pair of twin brothers separated at childhood, and the film does it's best to keep them apart as they manage to confound everyone in their immediate vicinity, including wives Bubbles Laurel (Betty Healey) and Daphne Hardy (Daphne Pollard). I was expecting the 'lost' Bert and Al to show up as a couple of villains since that seemed to be the set up with Ollie's letter from his Mother, but they wound up being as bumbling a duo as Stan and Ollie. Arriving ashore via the SS Periwinkle, part of their gag consists of investing their earnings with James Finlayson, and delivering a pearl ring for their Captain (Sidney Toler). As the pace of the picture quickens, it's easy enough to get the brother pairs mixed up if you're not paying attention, but the sound track helps out a bit, using the familiar Laurel and Hardy theme music when Stan and Ollie appear on screen, while a typical pirate tune heralds the seafaring duo. When I was watching these Laurel and Hardy flicks as a kid back in the Fifties, the pictures weren't quite twenty years old; now, they're not quite eighty years old! Still, it's easy enough to recall the better ones when you catch a scene like the cement tub gag at the end of the story, with the boys rocking back and forth in that impossible balancing act. All in all, a fun romp with one of the classic comedy duos from the early days.

Reviewed by TheLittleSongbird 7 / 10

Mistaken identity high jinks

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were comedic geniuses, individually and together, and their partnership was deservedly iconic and one of the best there was. They left behind a large body of work, a vast majority of it being entertaining to classic comedy, at their best they were hilarious and their best efforts were great examples of how to do comedy without being juvenile or distasteful.

Didn't find 'Our Relations' one of the duo's best, they have done better short and feature films. In a filmography that was mostly solid to classic (only '45 Minutes from Hollywood' misfired for me, and 'The Bohemian Girl' was a mixed bag, but that was very early on when their partnership and style hadn't formed or evolved and when Hardy especially was not being used well), nonetheless it is still good and has much of what makes Laurel and Hardy's work as appealing as it is.

'Our Relations' story is a little convoluted and over-stuffed, with a little too much going on, and at times too reliant on coincidence.

Also found it a bit of a slow-starter with a draggy first third where there is a little too much talk for my liking. The pier scene is somewhat sloppily edited.

However, 'Our Relations' is nonetheless very funny, like towards the end and in the bar. It is rarely dull, going at a snappy pace, and there is energy in the slapstick and sly wit, silly and typical of the duo but in an endearing and entertaining way. The second half is much better, livelier in pace and chockfull of beautifully timed gags and wit.

Both Laurel and Hardy are on top form, especially Laurel (such as towards the end). They are equally funny with impeccable comic timing physically and verbally, this is not a case of one being funnier and having more screen time than the other (in their early efforts Laurel tended to be funnier and better used). Their chemistry is legendary for a reason and it is obvious here. The supporting cast are up to their level, especially James Finlayson (well used) and Alan Hale, who has some funny lines.

In conclusion, not one of the duo's best overall but among the mid-better end when it comes to their feature films. 7/10 Bethany Cox

Reviewed by bkoganbing 7 / 10

Home Are The Sailors

Stan and Ollie also play their twin brothers Alfie and Bert in Our Relations which is their own particular spin on Shakespeare's A Comedy Of Errors.

Laurel and Hardy are both a pair of henpecked husbands in perpetual trouble with their wives and also a pair of sailors who just find trouble wherever they are. The sailors are on leave and get a job from their captain Sidney Toler to pick up a ring. They also have their usual run-in with perpetual nemesis James Finlayson who is intent on fleecing them out of their pay on shore leave and good thing he's as dumb as they are.

Our Relations is more a comedy of the usual mistaken identity situations with twins than it is a series of comedy bits that usually characterize a Laurel and Hardy short. One exception to this is a bit with Stan and Ollie getting into a crowded phone booth with movie inebriate Arthur Housman. No need for description, especially with the diet challenged Ollie as one of the people in that phone booth.

Alan Hale is also in this doing a very nice bit of slow burn comedy as the owner of a waterfront dive who runs into both sets of Stans and Ollies driving him a bit crazy. Of course no one is driven crazier than the wives of civilian Stan and Ollie, Daphne Pollard and Betty Healy. You know how these two are with the women in their lives from The Sons of The Desert. That goes double for Iris Adrian and Lorna Andre the two bimbos the sailors pick up at Alan Hale's joint.

Ironically the Comedy Of Errors would make it to Broadway two years later as Rodgers&Hart did a musical adaption of it as The Boys From Syracuse. Our Relations doesn't have the great Rodgers&Hart songs, but it sure doesn't lack for comedy with Stan and Ollie.

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