Men in Black

A TONIC for the BLUES!

7.2
193419m

The stooges are three doctors who graduated medical school by being in it for too many years. They come across such problems as an overly chirpy nurse, a mental patient, and a combination to a safe swallowed by the hospital superintendent in the course of their attempt to get through the day.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

Cast

Photo of Moe Howard

Moe Howard

Dr. Howard

Photo of Larry Fine

Larry Fine

Dr. Fine

Photo of Curly Howard

Curly Howard

Dr. Howard

Photo of Dell Henderson

Dell Henderson

Dr. Graves (uncredited)

Photo of Phyllis Crane

Phyllis Crane

Anna Conda (uncredited)

Photo of 'Little Billy' Rhodes

'Little Billy' Rhodes

Tiny Patient (uncredited)

Photo of Kay Hughes

Kay Hughes

Nurse (uncredited)

Photo of Hank Mann

Hank Mann

Glass Door Man (uncredited)

Photo of Billy Gilbert

Billy Gilbert

Dangerous Patient (uncredited)

Photo of Bud Jamison

Bud Jamison

Tiny Patient’s Doctor (uncredited)

Photo of Charles Dorety

Charles Dorety

Doctor (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

It’s hard to imagine anyone ever giving Curly, Larry and Moe a job playing in the sandpit let alone in an hospital, but given that they graduated with the “highest temperatures in their class” they have been sent to a busy hospital to help out. That’d be the ultimate triumph of hope over expectation as this trio race around the corridors responding to emergency calls as only they can! I am not really a fan of this sort of slapstick comedy, but there’s no doubt that these three have an almost perfect ability to work in marvellously co-ordinated concert. Their antics and escapades all come across as entirely natural, and their abilities to perform amidst a supporting cast of actors who manage to keep a straight face as chaos increasingly reigns around them is impressive. Medical science provides plenty of fertile territory for them and this one culminates with a bit of comedy faux-surgery that rather sums up their enthusiastic haplessness. Though I doubt I’d need to watch this again, it does rattle along for an hectic twenty minutes of skilful synchronicity.

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