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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsDid you watch the Three Stooges when you were a kid? Do you remember a very funny short? I sometimes watched. I thought
Curly going up the height of steps with a large chunk of ice and reaching the top was funny. Didn't like the hitting. How about you?
MichMan
(16,422 posts)When they try and swear in Curly for the witness stand. "Take off your hat. Put your left hand here , raise your right hand. Take off your hat!"
debm55
(53,569 posts)Sneederbunk
(17,065 posts)debm55
(53,569 posts)rsdsharp
(11,630 posts)This film featured Jerome Curly Howard, who died in 1952.
EYESORE 9001
(29,367 posts)debm55
(53,569 posts)pdxflyboy
(903 posts)n/t
debm55
(53,569 posts)3catwoman3
(28,332 posts)...and still do.
debm55
(53,569 posts)buzzycrumbhunger
(1,521 posts)The abuse mortified me. I think it's because my parents NEVER spanked or raised voices.
What was that bullying supposed to teach kids--or people in general? 😧
debm55
(53,569 posts)watched them . but for me, I might have seen maybe 3 episodes and called it a day.
MichMan
(16,422 posts)Yet we knew that it was comedy and never tried to throw bricks at each other.
AllaN01Bear
(28,220 posts)nyuk nyuk. slowly i turned , step by step. and yes i thought they were funny.
debm55
(53,569 posts)GreenWave
(12,112 posts)debm55
(53,569 posts)MiHale
(12,427 posts)My Mom hated the Stooges.
debm55
(53,569 posts)CurtEastPoint
(19,784 posts)
debm55
(53,569 posts)CurtEastPoint
(19,784 posts)debm55
(53,569 posts)pandr32
(13,674 posts)I thought they were not-funny and abusive.
There certainly is a lot worse now.
debm55
(53,569 posts)Last edited Sun Nov 30, 2025, 12:21 PM - Edit history (1)
pandr32
(13,674 posts)The punches, pokes, slaps, and shoves were all deliberate, though, and not accidental (like hitting people with the ends of the ladder, or a board when you turn).
debm55
(53,569 posts)Mike Nelson
(10,868 posts)... plus Shemp, Laurel & Hardy... I'm surprised at how violent they are. Laurel and Hardy did a piano like the ice block you mentioned. They would be dead after almost every segment. The Stooges would be dead, or badly bruised. Both teams are played for a couple hours every Saturday, on ME TV in Los Angeles. The old cartoons were even more violent. It's shocking to me, now.
debm55
(53,569 posts)MichMan
(16,422 posts)Love the Stooges.
debm55
(53,569 posts)SheltieLover
(75,484 posts)Just a lot of slap stick comedy. Lol
debm55
(53,569 posts)gab13by13
(30,825 posts)My uncle decided to take us to the movies. It was the 3 Stooges who were hunting a bear.
Suffice it to say when the bear was getting the better of the Stooges my cousin and I started screaming, our uncle had to extricate us from the movie theater before it was over.
debm55
(53,569 posts)Ocelot II
(128,522 posts)Some of the old Laurel and Hardy films absolutely cracked me up, and Abbott and Costello were hilarious (I still laugh at the classic "Who's on first?" bit), but the Stooges just seemed kind of dumb. About all they did was yell and hit each other.
debm55
(53,569 posts)70sEraVet
(5,170 posts)Later in life I realized that the reason I didn't 'get' the Stooges, was because I didn't grow up with brothers. The Stooges were just exaggerating the antics of young boisterous and out-of-control brothers.
Also, my grandparents wouldn't let me watch them -- they were DANGEROUS!
debm55
(53,569 posts)markodochartaigh
(4,726 posts)There wasn't enough plot to interest me and the hallmark petty violence seemed unrealistic, what idiot would stay around someone who constantly physically attacked them.
I really loved, and still love, the Marx Brothers. Abbot and Costello are good too. As for cartoons, Jonny Quest was my favorite.
debm55
(53,569 posts)MuseRider
(35,048 posts)They rarely made me laugh hard but I would get stuck in their craziness. For some reason the "Slowly I turn, step by step......" used to just crack me up.
debm55
(53,569 posts)Raastan
(280 posts)Moe making pancakes on the steam press, Shemp laughing while reading comics, broom antics... My favorite!
debm55
(53,569 posts)Golden Raisin
(4,744 posts)they were that funny. Just wildly violent, glorifying bullying and putting the slap in slapstick.
debm55
(53,569 posts)Last edited Mon Dec 1, 2025, 11:09 PM - Edit history (1)
JoseBalow
(9,023 posts)Step by step, inch by inch...

debm55
(53,569 posts)Silent Type
(12,222 posts)debm55
(53,569 posts)MichMan
(16,422 posts)Moe, Shemp, and Curly were all brothers. Can you imagine their poor mother?
debm55
(53,569 posts)malthaussen
(18,337 posts)... since he was instrumental in their renaissance.
I thought the Ice Man short you cite was particularly interesting because my great-uncle was an ice man. He probably humped countless chunks of ice up Pittsburgh's stairs in his time.
-- Mal
debm55
(53,569 posts)Walleye
(43,429 posts)debm55
(53,569 posts)LoisB
(12,123 posts)debm55
(53,569 posts)Jughead
(119 posts)debm55
(53,569 posts)Aristus
(71,410 posts)Even as a kid, I thought the act was stupid and pointless. My Dad used to watch the shorts on TV. I asked him why the Stooges were always hitting each other. He said: Its called slapstick humor.
I didnt see the humor then and dont now. My Dad was a puns-and-practical-jokes kind of guy. That was his level of humor. This may sound snotty, but Im more of an aficionado of wit. Oscar Wilde, that sort of thing.
debm55
(53,569 posts)doc03
(38,696 posts)the army and sank a ship. They had a dog wash business one time.
debm55
(53,569 posts)fluffing bully.
ificandream
(11,594 posts)Last edited Sun Nov 30, 2025, 08:52 PM - Edit history (1)
That's when I became a big fan.
As far as my favorite Stooges short, it's this one.
debm55
(53,569 posts)ProfessorGAC
(75,469 posts)No the hitting didn't bother me.
Even as a kid, I knew they were faking it.
It was just brain candy.
debm55
(53,569 posts)LogDog75
(1,009 posts)During the 30s and 40s, slapstick humor was popular and the Three Stooges were great at it. With the advent of TV, their movies appealed to teenagers and younger kids. Even today, you can sometimes see comical references to The Three Stooges in movies and on TV.
debm55
(53,569 posts)MichMan
(16,422 posts)Curlys contract with Columbia Pictures included a clause that allowed him to bring his dogs on set. The studio limited him to no more than two dogs at any given time. This was due to Curlys pups making random unplanned walk-on appearances during production. Especially during some of the more raucous scenes. You can still catch those surprise canine cameos in some of the earliest Three Stooges shorts.
Typically having several dogs at any given time, Curly was known to come home often with strays he found along his travels. He would foster the strays until he was able to find new homes. And when the Stooges were on tour, Curly made it a point to rehome, at least, 1 stray in each town they visited. It is estimated that Curly saved and re-homed more than 5000 dogs in his lifetime making him a man before his time with his humane concern for mans best friend.
Curly did have his own dogs, a couple of Collies (one of whom was named, Lady), Cocker Spaniels, Miniature Schnauzers, and a Boxer (though curiously, his brother, Shemp, had an assortment of phobias that included a fear of every dog but his own Collie, Wags).
In the book, Curly: An Illustrated biography of the Superstooge, by Joan Howard Maurer (Moe Howards daughter), she writes that of the dogs, Some barked their brains out, some bit and snapped, but all of them were one man dogs, and loved only Curly. To Curly, a canine companion made minimal demands, was always affectionate, cost very little money to care for, and was forever loyal.
https://nationalpurebreddogday.com/the-dog-loving-stooge/
debm55
(53,569 posts)Delarage
(2,510 posts)I watched the reruns as a kid and always thought this one was funny.
debm55
(53,569 posts)Klarkashton
(4,588 posts)The television bursts with water while showing nigra falls.
debm55
(53,569 posts)marble falls
(69,948 posts)... As Captain Penny always said, "Laugh at them, laugh with them, but don't do as they do!", as a condition to keeping the stooges on his show after moms with kids who did as they did and almost poked some other kids' eyes out and flooded WEWS channel 5 with complaints.
debm55
(53,569 posts)Brother Buzz
(39,396 posts)If you watch carefully, you'll see Curly carrying a block of ice
debm55
(53,569 posts)Wednesdays
(21,482 posts)And the Swingin the Alphabet scene to me is one of the most memorable. Not side-splitting funny, but I'd describe it as "cute." And it's non-violent!
debm55
(53,569 posts)no_hypocrisy
(53,931 posts)I was in a motel room with a bunch of people watching a morning of Stooges.
What we noticed was how the studio cut out certain parts of one short and pasted them in new shorts, particularly four in a row that we watched.
Specifically, the Stooges were in a "Pygmalion" scenario, with a professor trying to pass them off as erudite, educated, couth gentlemen. The Stooges are in a home of Old Money; Larry almost biting into a pie; Moe taking it away; Moe sees someone coming and throws it in the air, where it sticks to the ceiling; a rich woman accosting Moe and demanding that he tell her all about himself; Moe nervously watching the pie unstick from the ceiling; and finally, the Doyenne remarking that Moe looks like the World is going to crash in on him; he escapes, she looks up, and the pie vertically falls on her face.
We were hysterical every time that cut came on in a new Stooges short. We were saying the script in unison as it replayed.
And no, we weren't drunk or high. It was just so ridiculous.