Sons of the Desert

Sons of the Desert(1933)

NR
12/29/1933 (US)Comedy1h 5m
7.0

"THEIR NEW FULL-LENGTH FEATURE PICTURE!"

Overview

Ollie and Stan deceive their wives into thinking they are taking a medically necessary cruise when they are really going to a lodge convention.

William A. Seiter

Director

Jack Barty

Writer

Glenn Tryon

Writer

William A. Seiter

Writer

Stan Laurel

Writer

Oliver Hardy

Writer

Eddie Welch

Writer

Charley Chase

Writer

Frank Terry

Writer

Hal Roach

Writer

Frank Craven

Story

Where to Watch

Stream

YouTube TV

Rent

Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube

Buy

Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube

Powered by JustWatch

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Media

SONS OF THE DESERT 1933 Trailer

SONS OF THE DESERT 1933 Trailer

Trailer

Social

J
A review by John Chard
9.0

Written on August 27, 2015

Honolulu Baby!

As members of the mason mens club The Sons Of The Desert, Stan & Ollie are desperate to go away to one of the clubs conventions in Chicago. This idea is given the no no from the boys' wives {Mae Busch & Dorothy Christy}, so Ollie fakes ill health and the boys wangle a supposed sea voyage to aid his recovery. Of course they head to Chicago for their boys own fun, unbeknown to them that the ship they had told their wives they were travelling on has sunk at sea!

I think this stands the test of time as one of the best Laurel & Hardy pictures because it's one of the most professional that they made. Laurel wasn't wholly satisfied with a couple of preceding features that they did, he felt it was becoming slapstick for slapstick's sake, so in came a new writing team to work with him to give us a tighter character driven laugh fest.

The films main triumph is the integration and impact of the wives, they add greatly to the comedy with sparky dialogue and visual madness. So many great moments that I don't wish to point any single one out, you just need to see it and enjoy. The songs are fun, the narrative is as tidy as they would do, and the underlying honesty is the best policy message is one we all should heed. 9/10