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A Chump at Oxford
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Directed by Alfred Goulding
Back at Hal Roach Studios for the first time since 1938's Block-Heads, Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy star in the uneven but generally rewarding A Chump at Oxford. The boys are cast as street-sweepers who hope to better their lot in life by attending night school. Fate intervenes when Stan and Ollie are instrumental in the capture of a bank robber, whereupon they are rewarded by the bank's grateful president (Forbes Murray) with an all-expenses-paid education at England's Oxford University. Arriving on the venerable old campus dressed in Eton jackets, our heroes are pounced upon by a group of prankish students and subjected to all manner of practical jokes. After spending most of the night trying to escape from a maze, Stan and Ollie are installed in their "new quarters"-which turns out to be the bedroom of the Dean (Wilfred Lucas). This sort of collegiate nonsense comes to an end when it is discovered that simple-minded Stan is actually Lord Paddington, the brainiest student and finest athlete that ever attended Oxford. According to Meredith the valet (Forrester Harvey), His Lordship wandered away from the university upon being rendered an amnesiac by a blow on the head. An accidental tap on the noggin restores Stan to his aristocratic Lord Paddington status, whereupon he beats up a crowd of bullying students and deposits them one by one in a nearby ditch. Though Ollie is aghast to learn that Stan-er, His Lordship-has no recollection of their previous friendship, he decides to stay on at Oxford as Paddington's manservant. After having been humiliated once too often by his vain and condescending employer, Ollie angrily packs his bags and prepares to head for home, when yet another bop on His Lordship's skull causes him to revert to lovable, bumbling old Stan again. Originally intended as a four-reeler (running approximately 45 minutes), A Chump at Oxford was completed in the spring of 1939, whereupon Laurel and Hardy were loaned out to producer Boris Morros to star in The Flying Deuces. When shooting was finished on the latter film, the team was summoned back to Roach to film a 2-reel "prologue" for Oxford, bringing the film's running time up to 63 minutes. The new footage consisted of a reworking of the boys' 1928 comedy From Soup to Nuts, with temporary servants Stan and Ollie unintentionally wrecking a dinner party held by Mr. and Mrs. Vandevere (played by veteran L&H supporting players James Finlayson and Anita Garvin). The patchwork stucture of A Chump at Oxford works against its overall effectiveness, but the scenes in which Stan Laurel undergoes a complete change of character as the genius-level Lord Paddington more than make up for the film's earlier shortcomings. One of the students (the tall, mustachioed one) is played by Peter Cushing, in his second Hollywood film appearance. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
A Chump at Oxford really does have a piecemeal sense about it, but the humor is so well done that it overcomes its fragmented nature. When its original 42 minutes was being shot, producer Hal Roach was in the midst of creating his aborted "Streamliners" series of featurette-length films. This spoof of 1938's A Yank at Oxford was originally meant to be but four reels long. Previews were so successful, however, that Roach tacked an extra two-reel segment onto the beginning to make it feature length (although at 63 minutes it's still on the short side). Each segment (and there really are three -- even the 42-minute version had a prologue-type beginning) show comic duo Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy in top form. The added-on footage takes its cues from the boys' 1928 silent, From Soup to Nuts, and even features Anita Garvin, reprising her role of the society matron in need of help for her dinner party. This time around, however, James Finlayson adds his classic double and triple-takes as her husband, and Stan, in drag, is posing as a maid. After Finlayson chases them out of his home, we next see the boys as street cleaners who stop a bank robber with that eternal comedy device, a banana peel. The bank president (Forbes Murray) rewards Stan and Ollie by sending them to Oxford to get their much-desired education. While the razzing the boys get from the students is hilariously funny, it's really the last few minutes in which the film transcends Laurel and Hardy's usual fun. A window sill hits Stan on the head and he changes from his everyday dim self into the brilliant but haughtily arrogant Lord Paddington. It's the only time during Stan Laurel's tenure with Oliver Hardy (at least, once the duo was established) in which he plays a character markedly different from his familiar persona. The surprise this creates is matched only by the relief felt -- by both Ollie and the audience -- when Stan is knocked on the head once again to become his old, nitwit self. Stan's transformation is truly magical and it's a reminder that his talent had a richness and depth that is often taken for granted. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
 

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