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A Chump at Oxford | 
| Director: Alfred J. Goulding Actors: Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Wilfred Lucas, Forbes Murray, Frank Baker Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
List Price: $5.99 Buy Used: $3.26 You Save: $2.73 (46%)
Used (9) Collectible (2) from $3.26
Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 18449
Format: Black & White, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: VHS Tape Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 63 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 6302034035 UPC: 013132930138 EAN: 9786302034035 ASIN: 6302034035
Theatrical Release Date: 1940 Release Date: October 6, 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: From a private collection (not an ex library or ex rental). Tape tested and works fine. Comes in original case in good shape.
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Amazon.com This wild Laurel and Hardy film casts the pair as street cleaners who stop a bank robbery. As their reward, they are both given full-ride scholarships to Oxford (which seems a bit odd, since it was the middle of the Depression). When they arrive at the British institution of higher learning, however, they become the objects of extensive pranks by the other students, who are upperclassmen in more ways than one and look down their noses at the working-class buffoons. Except for one thing: Stan, as it turns out, was one of Oxford's most distinguished and accomplished scholars before a blow on the head turned him into the easygoing dimwit we know and love. Another knock on the noggin turns him back into the veddy British lord, who promptly sets the other students straight. Some very funny business with the boys and a stuffy dean, whose quarters they invade. --Marshall Fine
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
Has a belly-laugh bit -- and shows a DIFFERENT Stan Laurel! January 27, 2002 Joel L. Gandelman (San Diego, CA USA) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
A CHUMP AT OXFORD, one of the team's final flicks for comedic soul-mate producer, Hal Roach, hasn't aged as well as some other Laurel & Hardy Features -- but it has several bits making it a must for comedy fans, aspiring comedians, or any young person just discovering this first class comedy team. And these days you almost have to be on an expedition to find their movies, since many are no longer re-issued on video. A CHUMP AT OXFORD actually seems like several little movies edited together and, indeed, according to one account the dinner scene which opens this movie -- a reprise of a silent film comedy dinner scene -- was added later. No matter what the real behind-the-scenes story is, this scene, featuring the hilarious Jimmy Finlayson, original creator of the "DOUGH!" popularized in recent years by Homer Simpson, is a scream. Still, this scene's supposedly big comedy payoff -- Stan coming out in his long underwear (after being told to serve the salad "undressed"), causing scandalized women to faint -- is outdated for today's audiences (younger ones will wonder what all the fainting is all about since the long underwear barely resembles what most people wear for underwear today). BUT there are three key reasons why you need to get this video: 1: STAN LAUREL'S UNUSUAL ROLE: When "the boys" thwart a robbery and are rewarded with paid education at Oxford and arrive in England, a bump on the head transforms Stan into the aristocratic, brilliant Lord Paddington. This not only gives viewers a glimpse of Stan Laurel's acting ability but perhaps gives a better view of the "real" Stan, who was no dummy (he was the brains behind many of the team's bits and helped edit a lot of the earlier, funnier movies). In his role as upper-class gentleman, the new Stan bosses around and verbally humiliates the usually dominant Hardy. This is one of the few movies where Stan aims a "fat" joke (as Lord Paddington) at Hardy. Hardy plays off against this new incarnation of a smart, bossy Laurel with sheer perfection. No comedy team has ever melded as one better than Laurel and Hardy. There truly was magic there (perhaps matched only by Jackie Gleason and Art Carney at their best). SPECIAL NOTE: when Stan wiggles his ears it was NOT done with special effects. He could do it. 2. THE LOST IN THE MAZE BIT: When L&H are lost in a maze, they sit down to rest. A student clad in a skeleton costume sneaks up behind them and puts his arms under their shoulders, using his hands as their hands while the completely out-of-it L&H try to smoke with "their" hands. It's hard to describe this comedy bit but the timing is so absolutely perfect and execution of this piece of nuttiness so seamless that you have to laugh loudly. This scene is worth the price of this video. Any comedy buff or aspiring comedian MUST view this short bit!!! 3. A YOUNG PETER CUSHING: Before all the horrors. Overall, the first half of the movie is funnier but the second is more worthwhile, since nothing can possibly top the bit in the maze -- or the startling transformation of dim-witted Stan into a Stan perhaps closer to the "real" Stan Laurel (who unlike Lord Paddington was reported to be a real sweetheart in real life by everyone who knew him).
An early, hilarious precursor to 'Gosford Park'. February 14, 2002 darragh o'donoghue (dublin, ireland) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Arguably Laurel and Hardy's last funny feature, 'A Chump at Oxford' is the film where we discover that Stan is actually an amnesiac, who, before an accident, was the fabulously wealthy, intellectually pioneering, athletically record-beating, and very English, Lord Paddington. Not only does Lord Stan thrash an army of malevolent Oxbridge undergrads (including a youngish Peter Cushing!), but he arranges luncheon with a certain Professor Einstein to straighten a certain theory the latter's been having trouble with.The plot - after a series of disastrous menial jobs, the accidental foiling of a bank robbery sees the boys rewarded with the Oxbridge eduction they felt they were always lacking - is merely a flimsy structure on which to hang some classic, short-like sequences. These are brilliant from the start - including an upper-class dinner party at which Ollie plays butler and Stan is the maid who gives a new meaning to salad without dressing. The dark themes - Ollie and Stan going round in self-defeating circles; the intolerance of an uncomprehending world - are lightly developed. But when the pair finally reach Oxford, the film achieves the sublime. Being naive Americans, they are instantly ragged by the smarmy English undergraduates. In the most amazing, frightening and central sequence, they are given wrong directions to the Registrar's - at the other end of a garden maze! Going round in ever hopeless circles (fabulously visualised by trick editing so that they don't seem to leave the frame, despite walking out of it), with Stan at one point literally taking the exit with him, and Ollie burdened like an elephant with a huge trunk (of the suitcase variety), and two bags ('Get a grip!' Stan places his on top!), they decide to spend the night in their prison. Here they are pestered by a student dressed as a ghost - his disembodied hand, messing with Ollie's hankie and Stan's pipe, gives the film a chilling Surrealist frisson. If this is the film's most resonant sequence, the two funniest are to come - the boys being tricked into treating the Dean's chambers as their own (and having a messy booze-up) and the gloriously weird Paddington set-piece, Stan enunciating a Wodehousean vocabulary and manically wriggling his ears. The slow, patient, accumulative construction of comic crescendos is given plenty of space by the unobtrusive filming.
A Chump at Oxford-Laurel & Hardy September 6, 2002 A. Crognale (Mahopac, NY USA) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
One of their best films! I grew up watching this on TV and now I have it and can view it anytime I want. Anyone who is a fan of these 2 great comedians should definitely have this film in their library. There are some classic comedy episodes in this film that will bring back memories for some and open up Laurel & Hardy to a new generation of viewers.
An all-time classic. January 4, 2005 Illumination (Beds, UK) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Stan and Ollie are jobless and down on their luck. Before long, their jobs as a maid and butler (Stan forced to dress up in drag) go wrong, and they end up as street-sweepers. After, unwittingly, foiling a bank robbery, they are rewarded by the bank manager with an education. This leads to them going to an Oxford college, where they soon fall foul of student pranks. After Stan is hit on the head by a sliding window, both he and Ollie get an education they weren't expecting. When I first saw this film, around twenty years ago, it was one of my favourite Laurel and Hardy films, and I'd still say that now. This is L&H at their purest - hilarious situations, great characters and a warmth so lacking in most of today's comedy. In fact I'd say there's never a dull moment in this film, would put it up there with 'Way Out West' as L&H's finest.
Laurel and Hardy's Higher Education December 28, 1999 Joe Libby (San Antonio, TX) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
A CHUMP AT OXFORD was one of Laurel and Hardy's last films for producer Hal Roach. Roach was losing interest in the boys by this point (he was occupied by his more ambitious features), so the film isn't top drawer, but there's still plenty to enjoy. A dinner party scene (reworking their silent film FROM SOUP TO NUTS) has Stan and Ollie opposite two favorite foils, Anita Garvin and James Finlayson. Best of all is Stan's transformation into the brilliant, haughty Lord Paddington. Those who have only seen Stan Laurel as the "Stanley" character will surely be impressed by this performance. Forrester Harvey is very amusing as Stan and Ollie's valet as is Wilfred Lucas as the Dean. Peter Cushing is highly visible as one of the prankish students. Hopefully, it won't be too long for this film to be restored, remastered and released on videotape.
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