Glove Taps (1937) Poster

(1937)

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7/10
Boxin' The Bully With The Little Rascals
Ron Oliver3 July 2000
An OUR GANG Comedy Short.

Butch, the new kid, is eager to beat up the toughest boy in school. For some strange reason, that turns out to be Alfalfa. Even with Spanky's help, our hero is scared silly. It looks like the `Oklahoma Wildcat' will receive more than just GLOVE TAPS from the bully...

Not many laughs in this little film - it seems the Rascals have trod this path before. Highlight: Alfalfa's Tarzan yell.
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7/10
The first appearance of the now evil Butch.
planktonrules24 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Tommy Bond used to be a regular in the Our Gang comedies. But, after a three year absence, he returned as an entirely different character--the evil nemesis 'Butch'. And, following this film, Butch would return for more films to be a perennial foil to the Gang.

The film begins with nasty 'ol Butch threatening the kids and daring Alfalfa to a fight. Spanky takes it on himself to get Alfalfa into training so he'll at least have a prayer of winning. But, most of Spanky's help seems to cause far more problems for poor Alfalfa. Can the Alfalfinator come through or will it be up to 'ol Porky to save the day? Overall, a pretty good film and worth seeing just so you can see Tommy Bond's evil twin, Butch!
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9/10
Glove Taps marked the debut of the bully Butch and his henchman, The Woim, in the Our Gang series
tavm15 December 2014
This Hal Roach comedy short, Glove Taps, is the one hundred fifty-second entry in the "Our Gang/Little Rascals" series and the sixty-fourth talkie. New kids Butch and his buddy, The Woim, see students at the school leave after the bell rings and challenges the roughest kid to a fight after declaring himself the new Big Shot. Reluctantly, Alfalfa finds himself picked so Spanky trains him. Porky and Buckwheat assist but the way they shake their heads, they don't think things will go well for them...This marked the return of Tommy Bond to the gang after a couple of years or so of absence following Washee Ironee. He's quite a rough presence to the gang in contrast to weak-willed Alf. But what follows is some of the funniest stuff in these latter-day one reelers. Sidney Kibrick had previously been in many of these shorts but I don't think I've recognized him in them even those with his brother Leonard. And Darwood Kaye appears for the first time here, as an audience member in glasses, but he's not Waldo yet. Like I said, Glove Taps was quite a funny short so on that note, I definitely recommend it. P.S. I noticed some of the Marvin Hatley score as that from the Laurel & Hardy film, Way Out West.
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9/10
Tommy Bond's Return to 'Our Gang' After Three Years as the Bully Butch
springfieldrental17 September 2023
Everyone growing up had a neighborhood or school bully. Producer Hal Roach tapped into that universal theme by introducing a slugger named Butch Raffety in February 1937's "Glove Taps." Childhood actor Tommy Bond returned to the "Our Gang" series after a three-year hiatus to play the bully to the Little Rascals. Bond was five when he began his film career with the Little Rascals about the same time George 'Spanky' McFarland appeared. A year earlier, a scout from Hal Roach's studio had seen young Tommy as he was leaving a Dallas, Texas, movie theater and convinced him to audition.

The now eleven-year-old Bond, reappearing as an older Butch, opens "Glove Taps" by waiting outside the schoolhouse with his friend Woim (Sidney Kilbrick). Once class is dismissed, Butch announces he wants to take on the meanest of the school's students. Alfalfa (Carl Switzer) backs away for him, only to be accidentally jabbed in the butt by someone's protruding pen behind him. Butch takes the challenge. Spanky conducts a training session to get Alfalfa in shape for the big fight. When the two combatants enter the ring, wild stuff ensues.

Tommy Bond's break from the rascals in his first go-around gave him the opportunity to be the voice of several cartoon characters in the Warner Brothers 'Merrie Melodies.' His second stint with "Our Gang" has him somewhat of a romantic as he vies with Alfalfa for the affections of Darla (Daria Hood) in the 27 shorts he appeared. Bond left the series in 1940. He was in several feature films before enlisting in World War Two in the United States Navy. He returned to Hollywood as the first Jimmy Olsen, cub reporter, in the 1948 "Superman" and the 1950 "Atom Man vs Superman" film serials. He later became a television director and producer, serving as the production manager for 'Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In."

Another childhood actor making his debut in "Glove Taps" was Darwood Kaye Smith, who played the rich intellectual boy Waldo, who also made the moves on little Darla. In his first film he's shown towards the end as one of the spectators looking at the Butch/Alfalfa boxing match. When the "Our Gang" film series ended in the early 1940s, its members acted in live performances nationwide. A Fort Worth Star-Telegram reviewer wrote of one such show, "Darwood is easily recognizable as a 'regular guy' in the juvenile company and conducts himself with good manners and lack of effrontery which distinguishes him from Waldo." Smith was in 21 "Our Gang" films and appeared in several feature films before becoming a minister for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. After spending over 14 years in Thailand doing missionary work, Smith returned to the United States. In 2002, he was killed in a hit-and-run accident taking a stroll in his Riverside, California neighborhood, dying at the age of 72.
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