Lloyd Hamilton Talking Comedies, 1929-1933
Lloyd Hamilton Talking Comedies, 1929-1933
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DON'T BE NERVOUS (1929): Ham is confused for his identical twin, notorious gangster "Nick the Sheik". Though he initially enjoys the affections of the racketeer's girlfriend, sexy flapper Rita La Roy, disaster looms when both the Sheik's mob and the cops come calling. La Roy shared the screen with Marlene Dietrich in Blonde Venus (1932).
PRIZE PUPPIES (1930): With a landlady out to kill him over weeks of unpaid rent, Ham tries to skip town on the next train. He gets mistaken for the judge of a dog show, but is quickly found out when he grades the canines by how shapely their owners' legs are. Director Alf Goulding also made some of Harold Lloyd's best work, including Ring Up the Curtain (1919) and Haunted Spooks (1920).
POP'S PAL (1933): Hamilton makes his penultimate film appearance here alongside fellow silent clown Billy Bevan. John Harron and Josephine Hill, recently married, inadvertently invite their warring fathers to dinner. When Ham shows up for a business meeting with Harron, the young husband must get the bickering in-laws out of the house before they ruin everything.
BONUS: COLONEL STOOPNAGLE'S CAVALCADE OF STUFF (1938): Radio comedian F. Chase Taylor, better known as Colonel Stoopnagle, hosts this burlesque of movie newsreels, shot in Norwalk, Connecticut. Taylor had previously appeared on screen in Paramount's International House (1933) and was the cousin of famed horror writer H.P. Lovecraft.
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