You are here: Three Stooges Reviews >The Three Stooges: Dizzy Doctors
The Three Stooges: Dizzy Doctors gives a 93 minutes of six Three Stooges classics, all dealing with the Stooges and doctors in some sense or another, in a random order: "Dizzy Doctors" (1937), "Bubble Trouble" (1953), "Termites of 1938" (1938), "Listen Judge" (1946), "The Tooth Will Out" (1946), and "Brideless Groom" (1947). The shorts cover some familiar territory; "Bubble Trouble" is a remake of "All Gummed Up," although with a different (and I think superior ending -- Moe acting like a chimp after quaffing their potion).
"Termites of 1938" contains one of their classic "mocking the upper crust" routines - where upper society folks begin to imitate the Stooges' eating habits - a classic bit is where Curly starts using his knife to catapult peas into his mouth, and the other guests follow suit. The audio and video are good. "Brideless Groom" is available in the public domain from countless sources, but few look at good as this restored version (it's also available on The Three Stooges in Color in both original and colorized formats)
Three Stooges: Dizzy Doctors DVD features
The 93-minute DVD contains these shorts:
- "Dizzy Doctors" (1937) - Moe, Larry, Curly
- The Three Stooges get a job selling "Brighto", which they initially think is cleaning fluid. "Brighto, Brighto, makes old bodies new -- we'll sell a million bottles, woo woo woo woo!" After ruining a cop's uniform and a new car, they discover Brighto is actually medicine. Taking their sales pitch to a hospital, they get into more trouble and must leave on the run when the head of hospital turns out to be the owner of the car they ruined.
- "Bubble Trouble" (1953) - Moe, Larry, Shemp
- The Three Stooges are pharmacists who invent a fountain of youth formula that can turn old people young. They turn an old lady into a beautiful young woman, but when her husband takes the formula it turns him into a gorilla.
- "Termites of 1938" (1938)
- The Three Stooges, pest exterminators, are mistaken for male escorts and hired by a rich society woman to help impress her guest of honor. A scene ensues where the guests at an upper class party rely on the Stooges to help them with their table manners.
- "Listen Judge" (1946) - Moe, Larry, Shemp
- A partial remake of "An Ache In Every Stake." The Three Stooges, after escaping a court charge of vagrancy and chicken-stealing, drive the servants out of an upper-crust house (owned by the Judge whose courtroom they escaped) while trying to repair the doorbell, and replacing the staff in time to ruin the dinner with an exploding cake - all over the Judge. Wonderful scene where Moe talks back to a French chef (played by the great Emil Sitka).
- "The Tooth Will Out" (1946) - Moe, Larry, Shemp
- The Three Stooges perform dentistry in the Old West. "Go West, young man, go west!" begs their dentistry professor, and so they do. Shemp does his classic blind act while trying to pull teeth, and the Stooges mix up "The Amatuer Carpenter" with their dentistry manual.
- "Brideless Groom" (1947) - Moe, Larry, Shemp
- To inherit a fortune, voice teacher Shemp must marry before six o'clock, but no girl will accept his proposal. Finally one of his repulsive students agrees to marry him, just in the nick of time. When the rest of the prospective brides hear about the inheritance, they show up at the ceremony and a free for all ensues. Shemp marries before the deadline, but wishes he was still a free man. "Hold hands, you lovebirds."
Quotes from The Three Stooges - Dizzy Doctors:
Memorable Quotes from Brideless Groom (1947)
Shemp: That's enough for today, you might hurt your voice. Ya know, bend it or crack it or break it or something.
Moe: Shut up and listen. Do you remember your Uncle Caleb?
Shemp: Do I? Why, that old tightwad! He'd steal flies from a flying spider!
Moe: But, Shemp, he's...
Shemp: He's a louse and a weasel!
Moe: Yeah? Well, he just died and left you $500,000 bucks.
Shemp: Just like that old skin flint!
[gasps]
Shemp: $500,000?
[begins to cry]
Shemp: Poor old Uncle Caleb! Like I was sayin', he was a swell guy, giving me the shirt off his back and throwing the buttons too.
Miss Dinkelmeyer, voice student: All right, professor. I know you wouldn't want anything to happen to my throat.
[exits]
Shemp: [to Larry] Except to have somebody cut it.
Larry: How'd you like to be married to a dame like that?
Shemp: Don't even say that!
Trivia about The Three Stooges - Dizzy Doctors:
- The Tooth Will Out (1951) - The reel where Shemp practices his dentistry was actually filmed for Merry Mavericks (1951) but was too long for inclusion as it ran, and too funny to edit or throw out. "Merry Mavericks" (1951) had come in ahead of time and somewhat under budget, so producer Hugh McCollum persuaded Columbia to allow him two days extra to film additional material to round it out, and used the dental school sequence to set up this short.
- Brideless Groom (1947) -
- In one scene, Christine McIntyre discovers that Shemp is not the "Cousin Basil" she thought he was, and slaps him around, then punches him and knocks him through the door. McIntyre, who was not a professional stuntwoman, leaned too far in when she "punched" Shemp, and actually did hit him, breaking his nose. The sequence was left in the picture.
- Although Emil Sitka is famous for the line "Hold hands, you lovebirds" from this short, the first time he says the line, he actually says, "Join hands, you lovebirds."
Three Stooges Reviews • (0) Comments - what's your opinion?• Permalink
Most recent articles
- Ricky Loses His Temper | I Love Lucy
- I’ll Take Tallulah - song lyrics
- Hermie and Friends: Flo the Lyin’ Fly
- God’s Chisel - The Skit Guys
- The Magic Carpet, starring Lucille Ball
- The Yellow Cab Man, starring Red Skelton
- A Southern Yankee, starring Red Skelton
- Lured, starring Lucille Ball
- The Outlaws is Coming picture gallery | the Three Stooges
- The Outlaws is Coming | the Three Stooges
- The Fuller Brush Girl movie review
- Red Skelton Frogs poem
- Three Stooges Faces fine embroidered black hat
- Red Skelton inducted into the Comedy Hall of Fame
- Saps at Sea, starring Laurel and Hardy
Most popular articles
- Charlie Chaplin biography
- True Meaning of Christmas (free clown skit)
- Clown types - the white face clown
- A Nativity Gift (free Christmas clown skit)
- Famous Clowns
- Charlie Chaplin film list
- Emmett Kelly biography
- Christmas Clown Skit
- Red Skelton biography
- Clown Types - whiteface, auguste and hobo clowns
- the August clown
Please link to clown-ministry.com!
<a href="http://www.clown-ministry.com/"> The history and performance of clowning at clown-ministry.com! </a>
clown-ministry home | articles | history | skits | miscellaneous | resources | site map | privacy policy

