Calling All Curs (1939) Poster

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9/10
A Good 'Demo' Of The Three Stooges Humor
ccthemovieman-128 April 2007
Our three favorite goofs are veterinarians, if you can believe it, and are still the same slap- happy saps who are silly but fun to watch. We get sight gags right from the start as Curly swallows soap and then blows bubbles out of his mouth.

Anyway, after a bunch of typical Stooges clowning, mostly corny stuff, their three beautiful assistants prepare them with surgical clothing, and we see that it's a black poodle who will be their prey, er subject for operation. Apparently, "Garcon" belongs to a rich lady named "Bedford" and their "operation" is simply taking a thorn out of the dog.

Later, the boys give two reporters a humorous tour of the facility, with the drunken lap dog, the garbage can moocher with a bad case of "scavengeritus," and other corny comments. After the tour, the reporters turn out to be "dognappers, taking "Garcon" and holding him for a ransom.

There are many Stooge-like sight gags in this short and some still made me laugh, even though I've seen them hundreds of times. I liked Moe going through the intercom, the dogs all dressed with bibs sitting at the dinner table, the dog-bone sandwich biting Curly, the maid "scalping" Garcon, Moe being used as a punching bag, etc.

Goofy? Yes, but still funny. In fact, if you wanted to show someone what the Stooges were all about, this one would provide a good demonstration.
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9/10
Calling Dr. Howard, Dr. Fine, Dr. Howard!
mlzema21 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Sometimes something is just funny, no matter how many times you see it. I defy any of you reading this to tell me something funnier than 3 guys eye-gouging, slapping, hitting each other over the head with mallets and verbally assaulting each other, or, most importantly, skewering the sensibilities of the upper classes who were frequently the unintended (intended?) victims of their mayhem. I'm willing to bet that most of you who are reading this have seen "Calling All Curs" numerous times, and know it line for line, so there's no need to explain it to you. I just wanted to call to your attention one of the all-time great lines to slip past the censor: Moe and Larry are looking at a dog. Larry turns to Moe and asks, "Is that a cocker (cock or) spaniel?" Moe's deadpan reply, "I think it's a spaniel." This one's a must-see just for that, but the rest is forever cool, too.
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8/10
Craziness ensues as the Boys play Veterinarians!
stalzz646 April 2006
Lotsa Nyuk Nuyks in this one. I agree it's one of their best short subjects. They were best in the 'old days' of the 1930's and early 1940's. It got sort of lame after the original Curly retired, then died. They're all-time Great Comedians, especially if you love the silly crazy slapstick variety of comedy. Shemp was good, but not as good as Curly. It was cool that Moe employed members of his family to be Stooges- The original Curly (Jerome Horwitz 'Howard') and Shemp (Samuel Horwitz 'Howard')

They did so many short films together and a few feature-length films as well as TV cartoons, which you can now find on home video.
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Funny Stooges Short
Michael_Elliott24 May 2010
Calling All Curs (1939)

*** (out of 4)

Funny Three Stooges short has them running a pet hospital where they get a prized poodle owned by a very rich woman. A couple men pretend to be reporters and take off with the dog so the Stooges must try and track them down or go to jail. The opening few minutes of this short is pretty much a build-up joke that really doesn't work as it gets no laughs but after this it's all comedy as we get one great joke after another as well as some snappy dialogue. One of the highlights of the film is when the boys take the reporters on a tour of the hospital where we get to see various dogs who are suffering from various problems ranging from eating out of the trash to one who like to drink beer. The pay-off to the trash gag is priceless as poor Moe takes one for the team. Other funny jokes include a maid sucking the hair off a dog, the final fight with the bad guys and another good sequence at the dinner table. If you think about it too hard you'll wonder how anyone as dumb as the Stooges could become vets but just sit back and enjoy all the laughs.
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10/10
Great one!
Movie Nuttball9 March 2003
The performances by the Stooges are perfect in this short subject.I really love it when Curly sings!The dogs are funny as well!The story is very good and is one of My favorites Three Stooges episode!This is a good one to see!
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8/10
One of Curly's Favorite Personal Film
springfieldrental29 March 2024
In August 1939, the Three Stooges' 41st short, "Calling All Curs," two supporting cast members stand out with interesting backgrounds. The film offered one of the rare times the Stooges held a respectable profession, this as veterinarians. One of their patients, a poodle, belongs to a rich socialite who is kidnapped by hoodlums posing as newspaper reporters for ransom. Not wanting to upset its owner, the Stooges disguise a similarly-built dog with fake fur. When they delivered the dog to its wealthy owner, her maid played by Libby Taylor, while vacuuming sucks up the pooch's coat of fakery, revealing the mutt. Back in 1933, Taylor was a struggling actress in Harlem theatres when starlet Mae West offered a position as her personal maid whenever she wasn't working. West steered her in several roles, including the part as Tia's (West) hairdresser in 1933's "I'm No Angel," 1939's "Babes in Arms" with Judy Garland, 1941's "Santa Fe Trail" with Errol Flynn, and 1951's "Two Tickets to Broadway" with Ann Miller.

Actor Lynton Brent, who played one of the two disguised reporters who kidnapped the poodle, later made his mark in literature. After appearing in 300-plus films during his twenty-year acting career, he turned to his typewriter, churning out mostly Westerns. Brent's niche was injecting into his stories a strong dose of sex appeal with strikingly beautiful women. His book titles give a hint of the eroticism in them, including 'Violent Love Stalks the Plains,' 'Silent Sex Trail,' 'Passionate Peril at Fort Tomahawk,' and his 1965 classic, 'Lesbian Gang,' which the gay community has enthusiastically embraced.

"Calling All Curs" was one of Curly's favorite Stooges films because, as a lover of dogs, he had the opportunity to be around canines all day. This included the hilarious scene where several dogs are sitting at a long adults' dinning table ready to chow down on plates full of bones.
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7/10
Calling All Curs has The Three Stooges as animal doctors
tavm7 January 2019
For the last few weeks, I've discovered "watch parties" on facebook in which someone posts either a TV show, music video, or feature films or shorts live in order for anyone watching as it happens comment on what they see during it. So it was I discovered someone playing various Three Stooges shorts online. This particular one was colorized and didn't look bad though I did notice Moe's black hair wasn't colored-just kept the way it was in black and white. Anyway, he, Larry, and Curly are veterinarians in a pet hospital who are charged to take care of a certain dog for a rich lady to prepare it for a show. A couple of men show up intending to take that dog away for nefarious purposes...This was quite a funny one to watch especially when the focus is on Curly. So on that note, Calling All Curs is recommended.
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7/10
silly premise
SnoopyStyle19 January 2020
Larry, Curly, and Moe are three bumbling surgeons, animal surgeons. Reporters show up to do a story on the boys who turn out to be dognappers coming for Mrs. Bedford's prized dog. This is the silliest of premise. It's a lot of dogs and beautiful ladies. Mostly, it is so ridiculous that it couldn't help being fun. It does need a dog stampede running over the boys.
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4/10
Precarious pooch problems
Horst_In_Translation2 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Calling All Curs" is an American 17.5-minute live action short film that was released back in 1939, so it will soon have its 80th anniversary. This makes it a black-and-white film of course, at least in the original. The inclusion of director Jules White means already that this is one of the many many Three Stooges short films. This one has more writers than these usually do and these names are also not necessarily linked to the Stooges. You can check out the names for yourself if you want to. As this is among the earlier (but not earliest) Three Stooges shorts, it still has Curly in it next to Moe and Larry.

While animals in film had been a big thing already for quite a while, dogs especially, if you take a look at the Our Gang / Little Rascals works, it needs to be said that animals weren't too frequent for the Stooges, even if you maybe found some too occasionally. I think there was a horse in another one I saw not too long ago. But this one here gets the canines in as we have a posh poodle in the center of the action here. And when another dog hits the scene not much later, things really get out of hand as you expected. Other than that, it is the usual Stooges slapstick routine that never impressed me. And it is also over the top frequently and not in a good way like the way in which the poodle owner faints only because there is another dog there. At a pet hospital? Seriously? So yeah I thought this was a disappointment story-wise and not much better from the comedy perspective. Only worth seeing for the very biggest Stooges fans. I give it a thumbs-down.
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5/10
Disappointingly dull!
JohnHowardReid25 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Moe Howard, Curly Howard, Larry Fine (themselves), Lynton Brent, Cy Schindell (dognappers), Beatrice Curtis (Mrs Bedford), Beatrice Blinn, Dorothy Moore, Robin Raymond, Ethelreda Leopold (nurses), Libby Taylor (maid), Symona Boniface.

Director: JULES WHITE. Screenplay: Elwood Ullman and Searle Kramer. Story: Thea Goodan. Film editor: Charles Nelson. Western Electric Sound Systern. Associate producer: Jules White.

Copyright 17 July 1939 by Columbia Pictures Corp. U.S. release: 25 August 1939. 2 reels. 18 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: In this entry, the 41st of the 190 Columbia shorts, the boys play vets at a local hospital.

COMMENT: A rather dull entry. True, there's plenty of the usual slap-happy slapstick, and a couple of sequences have a bit of genuine humor — the dog's dinner, for example — but one has the impression that the Stooges are often laboring mighty hard under the weight of extremely indifferent material.

A rather tight-fisted budget (even by the impoverished standards of Columbia's two-reel short subjects) doesn't help matters either, although a bit of time and money has been spent on the dogs!

A pity I'm not a dog-lover!
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"We're looking for a dog." "He had four legs and a tail."
slymusic28 March 2008
Warning: Spoilers
"Calling All Curs," directed by Jules White, is an excellent Three Stooges short. Moe, Larry, and Curly operate a veterinary hospital, where a prize poodle named Garcon is captured by two dognappers (Lynton Brent and Cy Schindell) posing as reporters.

Highlights from "Calling All Curs" include the following (DO NOT read any further if you have not yet seen this short). As the Stooges operate on Garcon, Moe uses some overly technical jargon merely to explain that the dog has a thorn in its paw; the boys ask for some operating instruments, and they get a trumpet and a cornet, plus they use large mallets for anesthetics. Moe shouts at Curly through the intercom system, literally. The Stooges eat in the dining room with all the dog patients. Moe drops some ice down Larry's back, thus instigating a hilarious dance. The Stooges disguise another dog as Garcon by covering him with black mattress stuffing; when they bring this fake Garcon to his home, their little ruse works until the maid's vacuum sucks up the mattress hair!

"Calling All Curs" is a Stooge film that must have been dear to Curly's heart because of his love for dogs. Supposedly, every time he went out on the road with Moe and Larry, he would return home with a new dog.
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