Hal Roach Talking Short Films (starring Roles)
1929
- Unaccustomed As We Are
- Berth Marks
- Men O' War
- Perfect Day
- They Go Boom
- The Hoose-Gow §
1930
- Night Owls
- Ladrones (Spanish version of Night Owls)
- I Ladroni (Italian version of Night Owls, lost)
- Blotto §
- La Vida Nocturna (Spanish version of Blotto)
- Une Nuit Extravagante (French version of Blotto)
- Brats
- De tal palo, tal astilla (Spanish version of Brats)
- Les bons petits diables (French version of Brats)
- Gluckliche kindheit (German version of Brats)
- Below Zero
- Tiembla y Titubea (Spanish version of Below Zero)
- Hog Wild
- Radiomanía (Spanish version of Hog Wild)
- Pêle-mêle (French version of Hog Wild, probably lost)
- The Laurel-Hardy Murder Case §
- Feu mon oncle (French; Comprising Berth Marks and The Laurel-Hardy Murder Case)
- Noche de duendes (Spanish version of Feu mon oncle)
- Spuk um Mitternacht (German version of Feu mon oncle)
- Another Fine Mess §
1931
- Be Big! §
- Chickens Come Home §
- Politiquerias (Spanish version of Chickens Come Home)
- Laughing Gravy
- Los calaveras (Spanish versions of Be Big! and Laughing Gravy)
- Les carottiers (French version of Los calaveras)
- Our Wife
- Come Clean
- One Good Turn
- Beau Hunks §§
1932
- Helpmates
- Any Old Port!
- The Music Box §
- The Chimp §
- County Hospital
- Scram!
- Their First Mistake
- Towed in a Hole
1933
- Twice Two
- Me and My Pal
- The Midnight Patrol
- Busy Bodies
- Dirty Work
1934
- Oliver the Eighth §
- Going Bye-Bye!
- Them Thar Hills
- The Live Ghost
1935
- Tit for Tat
- The Fixer Uppers
- Thicker than Water
Read more about this topic: Laurel And Hardy Filmography
Famous quotes containing the words talking, short and/or films:
“Kasper Gutman: Youre a closemouthed man?
Sam Spade: Un, un. I like to talk.
Gutman: Better and better. I distrust a closemouthed man. He generally picks the wrong time to talk and says the wrong things. Talking is something you cant do judiciously unless you keep in practice.”
—John Huston (19061987)
“Lifes too short for chess.”
—Henry J. Byron (18341884)
“Television does not dominate or insist, as movies do. It is not sensational, but taken for granted. Insistence would destroy it, for its message is so dire that it relies on being the background drone that counters silence. For most of us, it is something turned on and off as we would the light. It is a service, not a luxury or a thing of choice.”
—David Thomson, U.S. film historian. America in the Dark: The Impact of Hollywood Films on American Culture, ch. 8, William Morrow (1977)