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Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 0014381484335 Format: Black & White, NTSC Label: Image Entertainment Languages: Manufacturer: Image Entertainment Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Image Entertainment Release Date: October 23, 2001 Running Time: 20 minutes Studio: Image Entertainment Theatrical Release Date: October 08, 1927 Editorial Review: Description: The Second Hundred Years finds Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy as convicts determined to escape from prison. With a tunneling scheme gone bad, they then manage to walk right out of the Big House by posing as painters. But their cover is blown when they switch clothes with two French officials taking a prison tour and are forced to return to serve The Second Hundred Years. Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - Whose Crime Is It Anyway?Laurel and Hardy are my choice for the greatest comedy team in the history of cinema. While some have argued the team's work lacked the social message of Chaplin's, the technical innovation of Buster Keaton, "the boys" didn't have the same grace and rhythm to their movement as Chaplin but, Laurel and Hardy simply provided more belly laughs than Chaplin, W.C. Fields, Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton. And I say this as an admirer of all those other comics. Most fans of the team are probably ... Read More Rating: - One of their first proper teamingsThis is one of the four titles that gets mentioned most often as the first "real" L&H film. (The other three shorts most-often cited for that historic milestone are 'Duck Soup,' 'Do Detectives Think?,' and 'Putting Pants on Philip.') In this short in particular, the boys have been sent to prison, and are trying to break out. Their first attempt sends them tunneling out of their cell and right up through the floor of the prison warden. Their next attempt is more successful, as they disguise themselves ... Read More Rating: - Awesome movie!There are a lot of hilarious scenes in this one! I loved it. It's just great! |