Shiver My Timbers (1931) Poster

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8/10
Hilarious 'Our Gang' short, one of their best
frankfob7 August 2004
Fondly remembered short in the wonderful "Our Gang" series. Ask any fan of these films which is their favorite, and chances are this will be in at least the top five, if not the the #1 spot. The great character actor Billy Gilbert--a mainstay of Hal Roach's "stock company" and memorable in so many Laurel & Hardy shorts--shines as a crusty but kind-hearted sea captain who loves telling the kids seafaring tales, but finds that his stories are causing them to neglect their schoolwork. He and the gang's teacher, Miss Crabtree (how come none of my teachers ever looked as hot as Miss Crabtree?), cook up a scheme to have "pirates" kidnap the kids and their teacher in order to teach them a lesson, but their plan winds up with some unintended results. Very well directed, cleverly written and very, very funny, with Gilbert and the kids working great together. Don't miss this one.
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6/10
Energetic Our Gang short with Billy Gilbert's sea dog
Leofwine_draca19 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
SHIVER MY TIMBERS is a fun short effort for the Our Gang team, made in 1931. It's most notable for featuring popular comedy actor Billy Gilbert, who was known to audiences for his roles in the Laurel and Hardy films, playing a sea-dog and pirate who regales the kids with plenty of tall tales.

Of course, this being an Our Gang production, the emphasis is all on the kids and the hijinks that they get up to. The result is a high energy production with a lot of laughs and a lot of characters running around the screen. It's as much fun as you could wish for.
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8/10
Amazingly silly....
planktonrules2 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Billy Gilbert is hard to recognize at first, but he has a guest roll in this short Our Gang comedy. He's a captain of a boat and regales the kids with stories of the sea and pirates--and not surprisingly all the little boys want to become pirates. However, instead of going to school, they hang out with the Captain. When the teacher, Miss Crabtree, finds out, she has a talk with the Captain and he tells her he's sorry and comes up with a plan. He takes the boys aboard his boat and makes them crew members--and then acts a million times worse than Captain Bligh! He and the crew pretend to be really mean--and Gilbert smacks them around and pretends to kill some of them! The boys are sorry about skipping school--but in some ways the plan also backfires. See it for yourself and you'll see what I mean.

This isn't the deepest Our Gang film I've ever seen, but it is fun. The only negative is the annoying laughing voice they played for the monkey--it sounded exactly like the very annoying dubbed laugh that the Roach Studios used for Mickey Daniels in his 'Boy Friends' films. Uggh.
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10/10
One of the best kids 'n pirates movies ever!
jimtinder3 August 2002
The 1931-32 release season of the "Our Gang/Little Rascals" was a transitional season for several reasons. First, Jackie Cooper, the Gang star of the 1930-31 releases, left the Roach studio for MGM. Chubby Chaney and Mary Ann Jackson, two other Gang stalwarts, also left the series. For a time, until Spanky McFarland joined the cast, the slack was taken up by Wheezer Hutchins and Stymie Beard.

The first short of the '31-'32 release season starring Hutchins and Beard, "Big Ears," was a misfire. "Shiver My Timbers," however, puts the series back on track and is one of the funniest Rascals films of this era. Character actor Billy Gilbert is blustering, hammy, and terrifically funny as the sea dog that enjoys telling the Gang pirate stories. The only problem is that the children are constantly late for school, and Miss Crabtree, the teacher, complains to him. Gilbert and Miss Crabtree hatch a scheme to make the gang disinterested in becoming pirates. The Gang dress up as pirates and arrive late that night at Gilbert's scow to set sail, only to be frightened left and right by the "bullying" pirates! Will they set out to sea, or go back to school?

Some of the funniest dialogue of any Rascals film appears in "Timbers." In one memorable scene, Gilbert is barking orders to his men. When he asks two of them, "What are ya doin' over there?" they reply, "We don't know, Captain!" Gilbert replies, "Oh, ya don't know, huh?" and pretends to beat the tar out of them! Other memorable lines are exchanged between Gilbert and Stymie. Longtime Roach writer Beanie Walker is to be credited for much of the witty dialogue of this period.

Funny throughout - a definite laugh romp! 10 out of 10.
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9/10
Another case of Our Gangers' playing hooky-- with punishment to fit the crime
petersgrgm14 January 2009
"Shiver My Timbers" is another fine illustration of the Our Gangers' propensity for playing hooky. In this one, Billy Gilbert is luring them away from school, by telling them windjammer stories. Miss Crabtree is understandably peeved, telling them that they were playing truant for the last time. She first wanted to report their behavior to the Gang's parents, who would have punished them severely. However, there came a change in plans. The Gang that very night got an opportunity to sign on as pirates, and were treated to psychological brutalities by the crew, to make the whole thing scary, to get them to change their minds. It did not work out as the crew expected, thanks to the resourcefulness of the kids. Indeed, there was no evidence that the Gang repented and went back to school; nevertheless, their getting a taste of pirate life was a fitting punishment. Quite enjoyable, all in all.
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7/10
"The pirates have got the ships--every man . . . "
tadpole-596-9182565 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
" . . . for themselves!" starts the beginning of the end for SHIVER MY TIMBERS, which many viewers will recognize as a virtual documentary short exposing the grooming of Canadia's boat-borne baby seal clubbers. The final sequence of SHIVER MY TIMBERS is particularly chilling, as a grown man eggs on a toddler of four to club him in the head again and again. No doubt this repetitive cudgeling will leave its willing "victim" no worse off than the typical veteran of what passes for leather-helmeted "Grey Cup" football up in Canadia, but it's clear that these increasingly forceful blows will soon give this terrible tyke the "skill" and experience necessary to remorselessly smash tiny baby seal skulls to smithereens. Worst of all, the alleged teacher of these tragic toddlers featured during SHIVER MY TIMBERS collaborates in cahoots with the captain of the baby fur coat sealing vessel by turning an episode of understandable mass hooky into a school-sanctioned field trip one step away from Canadia's Bloody Killing Fields. Today's Boy Soldiers of Africa--or even Indonesia's genocidal boy scouts of the 1960s--have nothing over these Baby Seals Club kiddies of the 1930s.
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9/10
Shiver My Timbers is another hilarious Our Gang short
tavm23 October 2014
This Hal Roach comedy short, Shiver My Timbers, is the one hundred ninth in the "Our Gang/Little Rascals" series and the twenty-first talkie. In this one, Billy Gilbert is regaling the gang with stories of his adventures to the consternation of Miss Crabtree since the kids always miss her classes as a result. When she confronts Gilbert of this, he resolves to scare them of their desire to become pirates. I'll stop there and just say this was one of the most funny of the series especially when Gilbert really turns on the florid villainy in his performance! And Stymie, as always, steals the show with his wisecracks. By the way, his sister-Carlena Beard-is part of the gang here. After the too-serious subject matter dealt with in Big Ears, Shiver My Timbers takes the 180-degree approach to great hilarity! So that's definitely a recommendation. P.S. Among the crew is one Charles Oelze who was responsible for many of the outlandish props in the series. He's the one in glasses who scares Stymie.
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10/10
BILLY GILBERT AS THE SEA CAPTAIN. HILARIOUS!
tcchelsey20 March 2024
One of the finest and most creative early sound comedy shorts OUR GANG ever turned out, next to CHOO CHOO. Thanks to master director Robert McGowan, who knew how to bring out the best in child actors. He was a favorite director of producer Hal Roach.

The gang skips school and heads over to the shipyards to hear the exaggerated sea tales of captain Billy Gilbert. You can tell Gilbert played this one for laughs and had a blast with the kids. Angry Miss Crabtree (June Marlowe) enters the picture and wants everybody back in class! So she and the captain strike a little deal...

When the gang returns to stow away on his ship, Gilbert and his crew try to scare the kids silly by pretending to be killer pirates --also holding Miss Crabtree hostage. Surprise! The gang does the unexpected and "declares war" on the crew, faking them out and dumping barrels on their heads! A must see, and a bit like a Laurel and Hardy chase.

Applause for Billy Gilbert all the way, the greatest ham actor of 'em all. Some fun scenes for Stymie, who has the best lines, also Wheezer and Dorothy DeBorba wearing large earrings? Look for Pete, the dog, wearing a pirate hat and holding a daggar in his mouth!

Unforgettable material, and June Marlowe has never looked so beautiful. There are no production notes, but the shipyard scenes may have been filmed at Long Beach, CA. Get the dvd box set for this Classic, and remastered.
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8/10
Billy Gilbert is Captain of the Kids.
mark.waltz15 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
After spending hours regaling the gang with tall tales of the high seas, gregarious ship captain Billy Gilbert tells them that he's shoving off and wants them to join the crew. His motive? To get them to return to school after he is confronted by Miss Crabtree (June Marlowe) about keeping them from their lessons. They show up that night to discover that he's a brute, not realizing that it's all playacting by him and his made-up crew, all disguised to look as gruesome as possible. It's extremely funny, and indeed, a good lesson is learned. Obviously there have been changes behind the scenes with half a dozen noticable absences. A nice segway from the original talkie cast to the transitional cast, and it's still fresh. Billy Gilbert is hysterically funny with Stymie absolutely delightful.
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4/10
Pirate parable Warning: Spoilers
"Shiver My Timbers" is an American 21-minute short film from 1931, the early days of sound film, but of course it is a black-and-white movie still. The title as well as director McGowan and writer Walker make it obvious to film fans of the earlier days that this is of course another Little Rascals comedy short film. This time the gang listens to a "pirate" (played by Billy Gilbert, who looks much older than he was) telling them adventure stories. Miss Crabtree (the kids' teacher), however is not amused, and fears that this stuff will distract the kids from what is really important for whatever reason. So Gilbert promises her that he will bring the kids an adventure that will make them stop caring for pirates and pirate stories. I personally am sure that pirates were much more appealing to kids back then than they are today, even with the PotC franchise still going on these days. The magic seems to be gone somehow. Anyway, back to this one here. There was one funny minute with Stymie not understanding the concept of malaria, but otherwise I thought this to be a pretty forgettable movie really. The solution with Miss Crabtree telling the kids that the pirate said she was mean to them was also not really a fulfilling one. Then again, I am not a great rascals fan, so if you like the other films about them, then maybe you will enjoy this one too. it's not among their most or least known overall I guess. I give it a thumbs-down.
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