LOST" FILM FOUND IN GERMANY


     It is so rare that Laurel and Hardy make the news these days.  So here is an Associated Press story from August 10th, 2004. 

Film find: Comedic duo 'speak' German


Funnier than ever, comedic duo Laurel and Hardy can now be seen in a long-lost 1931 film shot entirely in German -- which neither spoke.

(AP) -- Laurel and Hardy, masters of foreign languages?

     German film historians have tracked a long-lost copy of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy's early sound work to an archive in Moscow housing a 1931 film the comedy duo performed entirely in German, the Munich Film Museum said Monday.

     But lest anyone get too impressed, Germans who have seen clips from the film are far more approving of the comedy -- some of it unintentional -- than by the pair's accents.

     ''It's important as a curiosity,'' said Klaus Volkmer, a spokesman for the Munich Film Museum, which discovered the film. ``You can't actually understand what they say. It's funny.''

     The mismatched team shot their 1930s films first in English, then reshot them with the same dialogue translated into German, French and Spanish -- which they spoke phonetically -- because it was so difficult to synchronize voices and actions in the early days of the talkies.

     It is an artifact from the early years of Hollywood, when such stars as Greta Garbo, Edward G. Robinson and Buster Keaton would act films in several languages to be shown around the world.

     The German-language film, Spuk um Mitternacht (``Ghost at Midnight''), is pieced together from two other Laurel and Hardy shorter films, The Laurel-Hardy Murder Case and Berth Marks, the Munich museum said. It will have three showings in Germany.

     The movie was billed as the first German-language talkie when it premiered in Berlin, complete with a visit by the pair, on May 5, 1931.

     They were known as ''Dick und Doof'' (''Fat and Dumb'') in their original incarnations in Germany, and were immensely popular. That acclaim has continued in Germany and the rest of Europe, far more so than in their homeland, said Wolfgang Guenther, who runs the Laurel and Hardy Museum in Solingen with his wife.

     ''Laurel and Hardy are the most important film comedy pair, especially in Europe,'' Guenther said. ``They were always human. They always remained friends.''

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