The Finishing Touch (1928) Poster

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7/10
Early knockabout with Stan & Babe
wmorrow5916 March 2002
This is Laurel & Hardy the way most people like to remember them: as day laborers in denim, hard at work on a construction project which is, of course, doomed. Here they are "finishers" who have promised a homeowner they can complete work on his house for $500. The house happens to be located near a hospital, so a cop and tough nurse must persuade the boys to work quietly. Within this loose framework of a plot the guys are free to wreak havoc on the house, the cop, the nurse, and each other.

The Finishing Touch was made early in the L&H partnership, and is enjoyable if you're in the mood for basic slapstick knockabout. There are a lot of great gags here, but somehow this slapstick lacks the deft assurance -- the finesse, if you will -- of their later films with similar setups, such as Hog Wild or Busy Bodies. As contradictory as it sounds, the boys became more expert at portraying ineptitude as they "matured." Later on, too, at least in their best work, the gags seemed to occur spontaneously; here, some of the material feels rather forced. Prime example: Ollie repeatedly swallows a handful of nails due to his insistence on carrying them in his mouth. Now, even in low comedy, you need a more plausible set-up than that. Does any builder carry nails around in his mouth? Having swallowed one mouthful, would he do it again? Ollie is too dumb here. This is the sort of flaw one expects to find in their much later movies from the '40s, when the team was being mishandled by unsympathetic studio hacks. Laurel & Hardy should be simple and childlike, but not moronic.

Mr. Laurel comes off best in this film, getting lots of mileage out of his magnificently blank expression. He has two especially nice bits: first, when his awkward attempt to hoist a window frame into position results in the frame gradually falling to pieces; and next, when he frightens himself into believing he's lost one of his fingers. Stan could do so much with moments like that.

Also on the plus side, The Finishing Touch offers the sparkling cinematography of George Stevens, as well as several estimable supporting players: Dorothy Coburn as The Tough Nurse, Edgar Kennedy as The Ineffectual Cop, and Sam Lufkin as The Very Unhappy Homeowner. Lufkin figures prominently in the film's spirited finale, when it becomes clear that, despite assurances, the house is not "built like Gibraltar." Lufkin tries to retrieve the paycheck he's given the boys, but they fend him off with ingenuity and vigor. It's the best scene in the picture, a warm-up for the crazed Grab-the-Deed routine in L&H's 1937 masterpiece Way Out West, and a delight to watch.
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7/10
Effortlessly funny
Leofwine_draca9 July 2014
THE FINISHING TOUCH, a silent short featuring Laurel & Hardy and shot in 1928, features one of my favourite gags ever put on film: Ollie insists on carrying a handful of nails in his mouth, with predictable results. Yes, it's entirely silly and doesn't even get close to realistic, but nevertheless the execution and acting on the part of Hardy make this one of the funniest things I've seen.

Elsewhere, THE FINISHING TOUCH is a very good effort from the twosome. As in all of their best plots, they play a couple of workmen, here trying to build a 'dream home'; what transpires will surprise nobody. The gags are laboured, occasionally forced, and of the most basic slapstick, and yet they work, and work, and work. The only downside is that this is a silent, so it misses all of the crashing sound effects that would have added immeasurably to the experience.
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8/10
Funny silent short
JoeytheBrit7 October 2009
This has got to be one of Laurel & Hardy's funniest silent comedies. They play a pair of labourers hired by a desperate builder to fit windows to a house. This would be difficult enough for the boys, but an added complication is the fact that the house is directly opposite a hospital, meaning that they must try to carry out their duties in near silence.

There are some beautiful sight gags in this one: Stan looking around in bewilderment for a pail he has inadvertently hooked onto the end of his shovel, Stan (again) carrying both ends of an improbably large plank, and Stan (yet again) attempting to saw a plank with a wobbly saw. It's real schoolboy stuff, I know, but it still had me howling with laughter. Edgar Kennedy, master of the slow-burn, plays the hapless cop whose attempts to ensure the boys keep quiet prove futile. The name of the nurse who thinks nothing of using a few well-aimed punches in order to keep the peace escapes me, but she's pretty cute. Be sure to see this one if you get the chance.
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The L & H touch
TheFerryman9 December 2003
In 'The Finishing Touch', directed by a master of slapstick (Clyde Bruckman) and supervised by a pillar of American comedy (Leo McCarey), Laurel and Hardy have fully developed their film personalities. The plot, that reminds Keaton's `One Week' and The Three Stooges `The sitter-downers', is merely an excuse for bringing up the best of the duo's explosive chemistry. The power of their humor relies not in the impact or unawareness of a gag, but in a skillful preparation of the comic situation. Laurel and Hardy's best trick is the anticipation of an effect and the audience's involvement in its prediction. Repetition is fundamental and the pace and timing of the build-up a hard to match one.
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7/10
The boys are building an house...or at least they are trying to.
Boba_Fett113827 March 2006
"The Finishing Touch" is a mostly at one location set movie. Because of this the movie hasn't got to concentrate on the story but can concentrate on the slapstick moments and humor instead.

This time the boys are building an house. But of course everything that can go wrong, goes wrong. And instead of constructors they are are more slowly turning into demolition men.

This is a silent movie, so the movie entirely focuses and relies on its slapstick moments, rather than the dialog or storyline. So fans of simple slapstick humor will find plenty to enjoy in this Laurel & Hardy short.

I for one, however do not regard this movie as a totally successful one. Not all of the comical moments work out hilarious, at least not in the way they could have had and because of that the movie is entirely set on one location, the humor is just too much of the same at times.

Does have its moments but definitely not the best- and one of the more forgettable Laurel & Hardy silent shorts.

7/10

http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
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9/10
A Damn Well Near Perfect Laurel and Hardy Silent Short.
JohnWelles24 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
"The Finishing Touch" (1928), a Laurel and Hardy short made in their last full year of silents, is a damn well near perfect comedy two-reeler, one of their best silents, only bettered by their "The Battle of the Century" (1927) and "Big Business" (1929).

The plot is simple enough: Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy are hired to put "the finishing touch" to a newly constructed house. But around this simple story, the duo perform a series of brilliant slapstick gags that show why they were the best comedy double act ever. The end, with the destruction of the house after a fight with a policeman played by Edgar Kennedy, one of the most memorable of the Laurel and Hardy supporting cast who also had a small (if important) role in the Marx Brother's "Duck Soup" (1933), no doubt inspired the obliteration of the boat at the end of Laurel and Hardy's "Towed in a Hole" (1932).

"The Finishing Touch" (1928) is a brilliant silent short that will be enjoyed as much by Laurel and Hardy enthusiasts as by connoisseurs of great comedy.
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6/10
Good Fun.
rmax30482322 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Silent. Stan and Ollie show up to finish the job of building a house. They don't do it.

The roughly slapped together structure has innumerable props that the two use in comic incidents, often repeated. Ollie, for instance, must carry a mouthful of nails and is bumped on the head or something so that he swallows them (three times).

They're visited by a cop, an almost unrecognizably young Edgar Kennedy, who warns them to keep it quiet because of the nearby hospital. Kennedy leans against a pile of boards stacked against the wall. The boards fall down with a clatter, accompanied by Kennedy.

Actually, it's not as slow as some of their "working man" efforts. The pace is brisk. And perhaps the neatest scene has the two bumblers playing toss and catch with a bundle of money while the owner of the house tries to intercept it.

It's probably one of their better shorts.
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9/10
One of the better Laurel and Hardy silent shorts
planktonrules31 August 2008
THE FINISHING TOUCH is a film typical of classic Laurel and Hardy films. There are many aspects of it that are seen in their other films. For instance, they boys are building a house and is very reminiscent of a few of their films such as BUSY BODIES and DIRTY WORK--all films where the team are trying to build or fix things and end up destroying everything around them. Additionally, at the end of the film, there is a big fight scene that sure brings to mind their BIG BUSINESS, TWO TARS and THE BATTLE OF THE CENTURY. Now all this familiarity isn't bad--especially when the films are as enjoyable and fun as all the ones I just listed.

Stan and Ollie are contracted to do the finishing work on a new house. However, since they are idiots, the tend to mostly break everything and hurt themselves in the process. In addition to Ollie getting the worst of many of these accidents, an innocent cop (Edgar Kennedy) gets banged around pretty badly as well--even though he was just an innocent bystander--a particularly even-tempered one at that. The film ends with the home being pretty much like you'd expect if Stan and Ollie had built it and there are many wonderful stunts at the end of the film.

Overall, it's a lot of fun and is one of the better silent shorts the team made.

By the way, watch the dump truck scene near the beginning. The truck dumps a load but only moments later the load magically vanishes due to poor editing and continuity. It doesn't ruin the film at all but I am surprised they didn't fix this mistake.
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7/10
The Finishing Touch
jboothmillard22 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy are the most famous comedy duo in history, and deservedly so, so I am happy to see any of their films. Ollie and Stan are professional finishers who pull up outside an unfinished wood house. After stopping the truck from rolling away, the Owner (Sam Lufkin) says he'll pay $500 to finish the house by noon Monday, Ollie says they can finish by noon that day. They begin, and Stan causes Ollie to fall down a gap which would have had a walking board/plank across, and he snaps it when it's put back. While Ollie is chasing Stan, a Nurse (Dorothy Coburn) in the near hospital asks a Policeman (Edgar 'Ed' Kennedy) to stop the noise, which he does, but this quiet won't last for long. Ollie walks across a new bridge made by Stan, which snaps and he falls with his head going through the door he is carrying. The policeman is still there, and a long board appears in front of him, and at the eventually end is Stan, and when his takes this long board back, the policeman jumps seeing him again at the other end. Inside the house Ollie steps on a pile of nails, getting some in his shoe, so Stan comes in to clear them up, getting the bucket handle caught on the end of his shovel. Ollie treads on the nails again trying to help, and he throws his spare bucket out the window, hitting the policeman over. The nurse comes in to punch in the face to stop the noise, and she gets hit stepping over an angled plank, thinking it's Ollie she punches him in the stomach, making his hat spin, and Stan smiling gets it too, with his hat flying off. The nurse leaves before grabbing a hammer when Stan rips a bit of paper when she bends over, she obviously thinks it's her dress. So then they continue working, with Ollie putting a pile of nails in his mouth to use, swallowing it when he trips over with no step, and again when Stan tries to put up a window frame, the previous one fell apart. After kicking Stan, Ollie tries the step and it collapses on him, and the policeman's still snooping around, getting a punch in the face by the nurse still wanting quiet and respect. Ollie puts a walking plank on a window sill to walk on to reach the roof, and swallows yet another pile of nails in his mouth banging his head. Stan starts sawing this walking plank for a measurement, using a saw that keeps bending, and when it saws through and Ollie falls, so too does a glue can and pile of planks, all landing onto the policeman. Finally a strong walking plank is found to walk onto the porch, Ollie manages to walk on it safely, but the porch itself collapses. Eventually the house is finished, just in time for the Owner, but a bird lands on the chimney making it collapse, with a podium and two windows. They all quickly get squabbling for the money meant for payment, with glue and paint being used too, also for the policeman nurse too. The squabble leads to Stan and Ollie grabbing the large rock holding their truck, and it rolls into the house causing it to collapse. Filled with wonderful slapstick and all classic comedy you could want from a black and white silent film, it is an enjoyable film. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were number 7 on The Comedians' Comedian. Very good!
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8/10
Stan and Babe Developing into Laurel and Hardy
gkrupa7314 September 2008
There is little I can add to the comments offered by the other posters. However, when viewing this film I do see Stan and Babe working on becoming the masterful Babes in the Woods characters we have come to know them. Their timing and interaction is never less than astounding and their fearlessly effective telegraphing of a gag reveals a mastery of their craft that I would argue no other comics have. There was one event that startled me about this film and helped me to appreciate it more. I have been informed by a reliable source that this film is used as a training film at the United States Department of Labor!!!!!!!!!!! What is it used to train people about? The common mistakes that ordinary people make in construction sites or similar situations that place themselves in danger. When film scholars label Stan and Babe as the perfect masters of Reducio ad Absurdum comedy, as they do, perhaps the use this early Stan and Babe effort found itself put to helps prove the point.
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8/10
L&H are contracted to finish building a house, and, at the end , it is 'finished', i.e. terminated.
weezeralfalfa10 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
When I think of this 1928 silent Laurel and Hardy comedy short, I picture cop Edgar Kennedy standing next to the house Stan and Ollie are working on, contractor's glue all over his clothes and face, wooden roof shingles plastered all over his body. Ollie had been standing on a board , gluing shingles to the roof, while Stan was sawing the other end, inside the house. When the sawed end comes off, the weight distribution is radically changed, and Ollie falls down. For a mere observer, Kennedy gets more than his share of physical insults.. Later, when the house owner is fighting with L&H over the $500. bonus he had given them, Ollie throws a bucket of thin white liquid(white wash?) on the owner, but most of it lands on Kennedy, covering him from head-to-toe. Meanwhile, Dorothy Coburn, a nurse from the small hospital across the street, comes over again to complain about the noise they make in their work. She trips on something, and falls into the big tub of this while liquid. This is all part of the frenetic climax, culminating in the boys retreating to their truck, squabbling over who is going to move the blocking rock behind their back wheel, that keeps it from rolling down the hill(apparently the emergency brake wasn't working). Unfortunately, they didn't get into the cab fast enough to start the motor before the truck rolls down the hill into the house destroying what hadn't already fallen apart.........Before this,, Ollie put a handful of nails in his mouth, and picked up his hammer and some boards. Unfortunately, he fell where he thought there was a step, and apparently swallowed all the nails. He repeated this twice more, in a running gag. Of course, there are a lot of mishaps involving boards and window frames. I'm sure kids enjoy watching the pair make all their stupid mistakes, so I will give the film an 8 rating. See it at YouTube.
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2/10
Silly construction slapstick
thinbeach1 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
The point of the film seems to be: Look how silly this is.

Stan and Ollie are contracted to build a house, but as expected, are so useless they only end up destroying things. Every joke is entirely predictable, and even the few chuckles are undermined by a too-casual pace. Most jokes aren't that funny to begin with, so lingering on them certainly doesn't help. Then comes the ending where I guess they want you to believe that throwing things at each other is funny. Who was their target audience, five year olds?

If this is your first silent slapstick then who knows, perhaps you will enjoy it more, but being familiar with the genre this one ranks very lowly. With films like 'One Week' and 'The Electric House', Keaton achieved far more laughs out of faulty houses than you'll find here, while Chaplin's 'Pay Day' has much cleverer construction site gags.

Given the amount of shorts Stan and Ollie were churning out at the time, I wouldn't be surprised if this thing was put together very quickly, without much foresight.
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8/10
Watch out for Dorothy Coburn!
JohnHowardReid9 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy (themselves), Edgar Kennedy (the cop), Dorothy Coburn (the nurse), Sam Lufkin (the home owner).

Director: CLYDE BRUCKMAN. Supervising director: Leo McCarey. Titles: H.M. Walker. Photography: George Stevens. Film editor: Richard Currier. Producer: Hal Roach.

Copyright 25 February 1928 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Distributing Corp. A Hal Roach Studios Production. U.S. release: 25 February 1928. 2 reels.

COMMENT: Yes, a delightfully entertaining if not exactly over-original Laurel and Hardy entry, which finds the boys playing incompetent house-builders who contrive to swallow (as well as tread on) nails and other sundries, as well as to naturally fall off planks and ladders at every opportunity.

However, all the gags and "unintentional" horseplay are, as usual, very cleverly built up, and the delightful slapstick mayhem is cleverly accentuated by the casting of the diminutively attractive Dorothy Coburn as the feisty nurse.
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9/10
Home Wreckers
richardchatten27 July 2022
Less than a year after they were teamed the boys had already hit their stride with this little gem. The emphasis here is particularly on slapstick as a succession of hilarious sight gags eventually culminate in the inevitable orgy of destruction.
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Decent
Michael_Elliott10 August 2008
Finishing Touch, The (1928)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Laurel and Hardy play finishers who are offered an extra $500 if they can finish a house in one day. The boys set out to make the extra money but soon a nurse (Dorothy Coburn) and a cop (Edgar Kennedy) start getting in their way. This silent short is a rather mixed bag as it features a lot of funny moments but the comedy isn't really ever hysterical but instead just mild laughs. The majority of the film goes for slapstick comedy, which includes Hardy stepping on nails, Laurel tripping over boards and that type of stuff. The cop of course plays the rival to the boys who keeps getting caught up in their madness and taking most of the abuse. Kennedy is quite good in his role but it's actually Coburn who steals the film when she decides to beat up the boys because of how much noise they're making.
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8/10
House building mayhem
TheLittleSongbird12 August 2018
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were comedic geniuses, individually and together, and their partnership was deservedly iconic and one of the best there was. They left behind a large body of work, a vast majority of it being entertaining to classic comedy, at their best they were hilarious and their best efforts were great examples of how to do comedy without being juvenile or distasteful.

While not classic Laurel and Hardy, later films, short and feature, had stronger chemistry when fully formed and used their considerable talents better, 'The Finishing Touch' is a lot of fun. Before, Laurel was much funnier and more interesting while Hardy in most of the previous outings had too little to do. 'The Finishing Touch', along with 'Leave Em Laughing', is one of their first very good efforts, to me it's easily one of their best at this point of their careers and one of the first to feel like a Laurel and Hardy short rather than a short featuring them.

'The Finishing Touch' does take a little too long to get going perhaps.

Also found that the ending was on the slightly clumsy side.

Laurel however is very funny, and sometimes hilarious. It is wonderful seeing Hardy having more to do and he is on Laurel's level and actually even funnier. The chemistry is certainly much more here than in previous outings of theirs, namely because there's more of them together and it was starting to feel like a partnership. Support is nice, particularly from Dorothy Coburn.

A good deal of the humour is well timed, hugely energetic and very funny if not always hilarious, with everything going at a lively pace and there is a lot of charm and good nature to keep one going. 'The Finishing Touch' looks quite good still.

In summary, a lot of fun. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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8/10
The San Francisco Silent Film Festival - David Jeffers for SIFFblog.com
rdjeffers18 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Sunday July 16, 12:30pm The Castro, San Francisco

"If you must make noise – make it quietly."

Stan and Ollie play bumbling carpenters attempting to finish a house across the street from a hospital. Edgar Kennedy plays the cop who keeps a close eye on their progress, and inevitable demolition of the house. In one shot, he stands and watches Stan walk past carrying the end of a board on his shoulder. As the board passes by for what seems like a very long time, Kennedy is surprised to see that Stan is also shouldering the other end! He is repeatedly hit over the head, doused in a bucket of glue, then covered with roofing shingles and later flung into a trough of wet plaster for his troubles. Ollie accidentally swallows the handful of nails he puts in his mouth, three times! The two have some fun with an irate nurse. Stan rips a sheet of sandpaper in half when she bends over, so of course she thinks … The finale includes a rock throwing fight with their boss and their large truck with faulty breaks rolling into and completely destroying the house.
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