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Hula La La

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Director
  
Hugh McCollum

Film series
  
Three Stooges Films

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

7.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Short

Cinematography
  
Henry Freulich

Writer
  
Edward Bernds

Language
  
English

Hula La La movie poster

Release date
  
November 1, 1951 (1951-11-01)

Directors
  
Edward Bernds, Hugh McCollum

Genres
  
Short Film, Comedy, Slapstick, Black-and-white

Cast
  
Shemp Howard
,
Larry Fine
,
Moe Howard
(Moe),
Emil Sitka
,
Jean Willes

Three Stooges Films movies
  
Hula-La-La and The Tooth Will Out are part of the same movie series, Hula-La-La and Pest Man Wins are part of the same movie series, Hula-La-La and Merry Mavericks are part of the same movie series, Hula-La-La and Studio Stoops are part of the same movie series, Hula-La-La and A Snitch in Time are part of the same movie series

Tagline
  
A motion picture studio buys a South Seas Island, and sends the Stooges there to teach the natives to dance. But no one said anything about headhunters!

Hula-La-La is the 135th short film released by Columbia Pictures in 1951 starring American slapstick comedy team The Three Stooges (Moe Howard, Larry Fine and Shemp Howard). The comedians released 190 short films for the studio between 1934 and 1959.

Contents

Plot

The Stooges are choreographers at B. O. Pictures who are assigned to teach island natives how to dance. The studio's president, Mr. Baines (Emil Sitka) has purchased the fictional Pacific island of Rarabonga (parody of Rarotonga, one of the Cook Islands) for his next musical extravaganza, but learns that the local natives have never heard of dancing.

When the Stooges arrive at Rarabonga, they soon learn that the natives are head hunters under the control of powerful Witch Doctor Varanu (Kenneth MacDonald). Shemp makes it clear he does not want the "hair cuts down to my neck!" and the Stooges try to flee with the help of the Tribe King's daughter Luana (Jean Willes). She wants them to rescue her boyfriend from the witch doctor, who plans to behead him in the morning—along with the Stooges. In one of the huts, the Three Stooges try to get their hands on a box of surplus World War II hand grenades guarded by a living Kali type four-armed totem idol (Lei Aloha). After getting the daylights beat out of them by the fierce idol, the boys grab the box of grenades, and fool the Witch Doctor into proving his expertise with his sword by slicing the box of grenades with his huge sword, and the grenades promptly explode, blowing him out of the atmosphere.

With Witch Doctor Varanu gone, the Stooges commence with their choreography lessons and teach the natives to dance.

Production

Hula-La-La was filmed on May 25–29, 1951. It was the only Three Stooges film directed by producer Hugh McCollum, who gave the medium a shot while Edward Bernds was busy directing feature films. Bernds described McCollum's directing style as "gentle and tasteful", like McCollum himself. However, film author Ted Okuda believed this hurt his films, not allowing them to reach their full potential. Hula-La-La was cited as an example of suffering from moments of restraint, resulting in several scenes lacking their comedic punch.

The standard "Three Blind Mice" theme is replaced during the end titles with a hula composition entitled "Lu-Lu." The tune was written by Columbia Pictures composers Ross DiMaggio and Nico Grigor.

References

Hula-La-La Wikipedia
Hula-La-La IMDb Hula-La-La themoviedb.org