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Bonnie Scotland
Stanley
MacLaurel (Stan Laurel), the American "black sheep" of the MacLaurel
clan, stows away on a cattle boat to Scotland in the company of
his pal Ollie (Oliver Hardy) so that he can claim his share of
his late uncle Angus Ian MacLaurel's fortune. Alas, Stan's inheritance
consists of a snuffbox and a pair of bagpipes, while the bulk
of the estate goes to Angus' granddaughter Lorna MacLaurel (June
Lang) -- provided she move from Scotland to India, where she and
her aunt Lady Vi Ormsby (Anne Grey) will reside with Vi's handsome
brother, Colonel Gregor MacGregor (Vernon Steele) of His Majesty's
Service. After nearly setting fire to their lodgings while trying
to cook a fish, the penniless Stan and Ollie are booted out into
the street, with Ollie rendered pants-less by a previous misadventure.
Heading to a tailor shop to get a new suit of clothes on approval,
the boys inadvertently join the British Army, and soon they're
shipped off to Colonel MacGregor's regiment in India. Accompanying
our heroes is Lorna's sweetheart, law clerk Alan Douglas (William
Janney), who has joined the army to be reunited with his lady
love. This could prove disadvantageous to Lady Vi, who has been
scheming to separate Alan from Lorna and marry off the girl to
Col. MacGregor, thereby gaining control of Lorna's fortune. Meanwhile,
Stan and Ollie get off on the wrong foot with their grouchy Sergeant
(James Finalyson), redeeming themselves only when they help put
down a native uprising (with the assistance of several fully-occupied
beehives!) Though it proved to be their biggest moneymaker to
date, Bonnie Scotland was one of the weaker Laurel & Hardy features,
with far too much time devoted to the supporting characters. Too,
the picture was rather raggedly re-edited after several unsatisfactory
previews: as it now stands, the film stops cold after 80 minutes,
without even bothering to wrap up the plotline. Still, it contains
two of the team's funniest sequences: the boys' impromptu dance
to the tune of A Hundred Pipers, and the classic marching scene,
wherein an out-of-step Stan manages to convince everyone in the
regiment that they're out of step!
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