In this box comedy, the Stooges run the Pip Boys Tailor Shop. They receive a bill for tailoring equipment, which will be repossessed if the bill is not paid. They hear on their radio that a robber named Terry Hargen is on the loose and a large reward is offered for his capture. Shemp thinks they should catch Hargen, collect the reward and pay their bill. Later on, the Stooges do meet up with Hargen and his henchmen. The boys thwart the bad guys, but a cop gets the reward. They manage to find money in Hargen's coat pocket and pay their debts off. 1947 Remade as RIP, SEW AND STITCH (1953), with stock footage.
Have you ever said, "I can't draw a straight line"? Learn to draw in two easy steps with Artist Katherine McDermott. This video is an excerpt from her entertaining and instructional video 'How to Paint a Poppy that POPS!'
Full Feature Movie. A compilation of clips from various Stooges shorts with Moe, Larry and Curly, intermixed with new footage featuring Paul Winchell and his dummies, Jerry Mahoney and Knucklehead Smiff. The clips present classic moments from OILY TO BED, OILY TO RISE (1939), HOW HIGH IS UP? (1940), VIOLENT IS THE WORD FOR CURLY (1938), SOCK-A-BYE BABY (1942), HIGHER THAN A KITE (1943), WHAT'S THE MATADOR? (1942), GOOFS AND SADDLES (1937), CALLING ALL CURS (1939), MICRO-PHONIES (1945), A PLUMBING WE WILL GO (1940) and HALF WITS HOLIDAY (1947). 1960
No. 2 California Baptist's Angela (#6) and Vera (#2) Willis take on No. 1 Fresno Pacific.
Robinson Peepers (played by Wally Cox) shows up for work at Jefferson High.
Three rich heiresses must get married before Midnight to collect their inheritance, but their Navy fiancees have to ship out to Hawaii. Their lawyer arranges for them to marry three convicts about to be hanged - Moe, Larry and Curly! Unfortunately (for the girls), the Stooges are freed when real killers are caught. 1941 Prison footage was later reused in BEER BARREL POLECATS (1946). The dancing lesson footage was borrowed from HOI POLLOI (1935).
Sweepstakes winner Joe is taken to the cleaners by two conmen G. Y. Prince and R. O. Broad (aka "gyp" and "rob"). The Stooges head to their offices to get Joe's money back. Instead, they find two sympathetic businessmen (the two crooks, in disguise) who offer to pay back the losses if Moe, Larry and Joe will pose as juvenile wards for a rich and eccentric millionaire, Montgomery M. Montgomery. But Montgomery is actually Prince's and Broad's gang leader, and plotting to kill the Stooges. 1958
To keep Red Morgan and his gang from stealing the mine payroll, the bank president and local newspaper editor fake a story that three famous lawmen are coming to clean up the town, using a "wanted for vagrancy" leaflet featuring Moe, Larry and Shemp. The three arrive in town looking for a job cleaning the saloon, and bumbling circumstances turn against Red and his henchmen, who are soon subdued by the "three famous lawmen." A crooked Sheriff frees the Morgan gang from jail, and they follow the newly deputized Stooges to the old Horton place, supposedly haunted by a headless Indian, and now the new hiding place for the payroll. Posing as ghosts, the crooks begin stalking our heroes. 1951 A reworking of PHONY EXPRESS (1943).
The Stooges are "Day and Night Plumbers," hired by the Norfleets, a rich married couple, to fix the plumbing in their basement while a social party is going on their mansion. The boys wreck the house with the plumbing: Shemp destroys the bathroom by flooding it, then drilling a hole through the floor, and later, Moe and Shemp connect the water pipes with the electrical pipes. Mr. and Mrs. Allen, two of the Norfleet's party guests, steal the Norfleet's Van Brocklin painting behind everyone's back. When the Norfleets notice their painting is missing, the Allens try to make their getaway, but the Stooges interfere and capture them. At the end, the painting is returned to the grateful Norfleets. 1949 A reworking of A PLUMBING WE WILL GO (1940). Remade as SCHEMING SCHEMERS (1956), with stock footage.
At the Immortal Hills Cemetery they have a big map on the wall showing all of the plots. A white pin in the map signifies a plot that has been reseverd and a black pin means that the plot has been filled. This is all well and good, but when the newly appointed chairman of the cemetery's management comitee gets the pins a bit mixed up it has fatal consequences. For More information on this film go to: http://www.steve-calvert.co.uk/pub-dom/i-bury-the-living.htm
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