4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Very funny, 18 June 2001
Author:
zetes from Saint Paul, MN
A light comedy, certainly, not on par with Fields' classics such as The Bank
Dick, It's a Gift, and That Old-Fashioned Way, but Tillie and Gus is still a
fine 1930s comedy. And Fields is in top form, with several great set pieces
- a crooked card game, making paint, and throwing firewood down to the
boiler room. Alison Skipworth is also quite good. The only major
disappointment is Baby LeRoy, who, in his first pairing with Fields, was
probably just too young. He's still cute and mischievous, but he and Fields
never go at it in the same way as they do in That Old-Fashioned Way and It's
a Gift. Even more creepy is the fact that Baby LeRoy's voice had to be
dubbed, probably because he wouldn't make the required noises. This makes
him seem like the antichrist - even more so. 8/10
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- One of Fields' "sleepers", Tillie and Gus is a great curiosity., 30 March 2001
Author:
duguidb from Carol Stream, IL
"Tillie And Gus" is a "Sleeper" for W.C. Fields. It is not one of his
movies that he is best remembered for, but it has several components that
make it a great curiosity.
First of all, Fields is teamed up again with Alison Skipworth, the craggy
character actress, who in her earlier stage career in England was known to
be a great beauty. She is also as far as I'm concerned, Fields' greatest
female co-star. She interacts with him well as she did in "If I Had A
Million" and "Six of A Kind".
The two are formerly man and wife in this saga, working as "missionaries"
on
different locations who are found out for their flim-flam ways and sent
packing back home where they are summoned to the dockside of a niece, her
husband and infant son (Baby Leroy), who are being swindled out of their
inheritance by shyster lawyer Phineas Pratt.
The niece owns a run-down riverboat, threatened to be put in mothballs by a
newer boat. A race is run to determine which boat has superiority over the
other, and who keeps the river franchise. Fields' and Skipworth's goals is
to help win the race, receive the money to thwart Pratt, and to kick the
bum
out!
Memorable scenes include The "Missionaries" working together to refix a
poker game on the train to their benefit, and Fields' memorable line to the
question "You like children?". "Only if they are properly cooked", he
says.
This film is seldom seen on television and never seen as a video. The
rights to this and many other Fields' films are buried in the vaults of
Universal Pictures. It should be released for all of us to see
again.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- The One Attempt at Pairing in Fields' Talkie Career, 22 September 2005
Author:
theowinthrop from United States
TILLIE AND GUS was one of three films (four with the "all star" ALICE
IN WONDERLAND) where he appeared with Alison Skipworth. It was the only
time in his talking films where Fields was actually built into a
co-starring situation with a partner. The only similar situation he
faced were in those now obscure silent comedies he made in the late
1920s co-starring Chester Conklin. But here, in SIX OF A KIND (where
pairs of male/female partners were enhanced by Burns and Allen and
Charlie Ruggles and Mary Boland), and IF I HAD A MILLION (in the "road
hog" sequence) the chemistry and balance between "Uncle Claude" and
"Skippy" was amply demonstrated. Skipworth was nobody's fool in her
comic roles, and here she fully demonstrates that she is capable of
confronting her thoroughly untrustworthy partner, and even
(occasionally) controlling him.
Fields and Skipworth are married relatives of a young woman (Julie
Bishop) who has inherited some property, including an old ferry boat.
Unfortunately, the estate is in the hands of a crooked lawyer (Clarence
Wilson), who is trying to gain legal ownership by every trick he knows.
Fields and Skipworth return to assist their niece, her husband (Philip
Trent) and their baby son (Baby Leroy - his first film with Fields).
Despite Fields' grumblings, his own dislike for Wilson makes him stick
it out to assist the young people.
The film is funny, but in episodes. At the beginning we see Fields,
before he returns to the town where Bishop is) facing a trial in
another jurisdiction. His repartee with the Judge (the great Edgar
Kennedy) is a marvel. Another high spot (in a bit that other comedians
have used - like Lou Costello on his television show), is when Fields
is trying to repair part of the ferry boat, listening to instructions
on the radio, but in leaving the room misses an important piece of
information that the radio repairman is now discussing another thing to
repair, and so Fields gets hopelessly befuddled trying to understand
the logic of what he is accomplishing by these instructions.
Skipworth had a nice moment or two also. Wilson has purchased a modern
ferry boat to drive the old one out of business. George Barbier is it's
captain. Skipworth goes at night to spy out the new craft, and possibly
find some way to damage it. Barbier, also on the watch sees her, and
goes down to confront this interloper.
Barbier: "Do you know who I am?" Skipworth: "No! Isn't there somebody
around to tell you?" Barbier hesitates - he did not anticipate that
answer. He continues. Barbier: "I'm the Captain of the "Keystone"."
Skipworth (looking him over): "Then what are you worried about?!"
Barbier, slightly confused about the way the conversation has gone, but
deciding to try once more. Barbier: "You don't understand...."
Skipworth (without missing a beat): "I'm not the one who is lost!"
TILLY AND GUS is truly a very amusing movie to watch
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Alison Skipworth & W. C. Fields In Comedy Caper, 25 August 2001
Author:
Ron Oliver (revilorest@juno.com) from Forest Ranch, CA
Sometimes it takes a crook to catch a crook. Thus enter
TILLIE
AND GUS Winterbottom, charlatans both, come to the rescue
of
their niece who's been cheated out of her inheritance by
a
shyster lawyer.
Alison Skipworth & W. C. Fields are a wonderful team in
this
little comedy, full of slapstick and verbal wisecracks.
Eventually
partnered in three films at Paramount - IF I HAD A MILLION
(1932); TILLIE AND GUS (1933); SIX OF A KIND (1934); their
characters only appeared together for a few seconds at
the
banquet climax of ALICE IN WONDERLAND (1933) - they
played off each other beautifully. Theirs is one of the
great
unsung comedic duos in screen history.
Fields is terrific, as always. His two great scenes - the
poker
game & the paint mixing debacle - are played with great
aplomb. Watching him handily defeat lesser crooks than
himself is a real treat, whether it's the three cardsharps or
the
sour old lawyer. Never deigning to smarten up a chump, he
is
surprisingly warm with Baby LeRoy, in their first screen
encounter. Always fascinating, never dull, W. C. Fields is
secure
in his place as the American cinema's greatest curmudgeon.
The formidably talented Skipworth (1863-1952), English
born
& bred, usually played comic, cultured ladies. Seventeen
years
older than Fields (unlike Tillie Winterbottom, she was not
born
in 1881), she was 70 the year she made TILLIE AND GUS.
With
her massive presence and clarion voice, she was an agile
match
for Fields' well known scene stealing techniques. Easily
the
most significant of all his movie matrons, it is unfortunate
that
today she is remembered primarily for her films with Fields,
and not for the rest of her splendid work.
Julie Bishop & Phillip Trent do nicely as the young couple.
Since
they are already wed & with baby when the film commences
there are no unnecessary romantic complications for the plot
to
deal with. Old Clarence Wilson once again does very well as
an
acid tongued villain. George Barbier is quaintly befuddled
as
the rival boat captain. And in his one scene as a harassed
judge, Edgar Kennedy runs his hilarious slow burn around
the
block one more time.
The ferry boat race with which the film climaxes - the
Fairy
Queen versus the Keystone - is well produced, with elements
of
hilarity & suspense equally mixed into the sequence.
Before TILLIE AND GUS, W. C. Fields had already appeared
in
five talking full-length films, but always as one of the
featured
players. With this picture, the Paramount bosses felt he was
at
last ready to co-star in a movie, although he & Alison
Skipworth
still receive below the title billing. After a few more films
Fields
would begin to solo star in a series of comedy classics.
Missionaries: Impossible, 28 June 2008
Author:
lugonian from Kissimmee, Florida
TILLIE AND GUS (Paramount, 1933), directed by Francis Martin, stars
W.C. Fields and Alison Skipworth, in their second collaboration
together following their hilarious "roadhog" segment from the episodic
motion picture, IF I HAD A MILLION (1932). With Fields and Skipworth as
Paramount's answer to MGM's own Wallace Beery and Marie Dressler, of
MIN AND BILL (1930) and TUGBOAT ANNIE (1933) fame, the plot for TILLIE
AND GUS could very well be Paramount's equivalent to TUGBOAT ANNIE
(1933), however, the only difference is that there's no need in
borrowing from MGM or calling this one TUGBOAT TILLIE, for example,
considering how Paramount has Fields and Skipworth at the helm is all
that's needed in keeping this 58 minute comedy afloat.
The story begins not with Tillie and Gus but with the introduction of a
young married couple, Tom (Clifford Jones) and Mary Sheridan
(Jacqueline Wells), along with their baby boy called "King" (Baby
LeRoy) and their very smart pet duck, taking up residence in the town
of Danbury. After the reading of the will by Mary's father, John Blake,
who died bankrupt, Phineas Platt (Clarence Wilson), a family lawyer and
a crooked one at that, loots the estate for himself, leaving the girl
nothing but an old ferry boat, forcing Tom, a college student, from
obtaining his engineering degree. Mary, who has notified her Aunt
Tillie and Uncle Gus, working their separate ways as missionaries, of
the situation, hopes they'll come over to guide them. Enter Augustus Q.
Winterbottom (W.C. Fields), revealed not as a missionary as depicted,
but a professional card sharp forced to leave Alaska by a judge (Edgar
Kennedy) following a crooked game; and Tillie Winterbottom (Alison
Skipworth), his ex-wife, owner of a Soo Chow Club in Shanghai, China,
who, after received Mary's telegram, gambles away her place to the
Swede (Ivan Linow), earning enough money to book passage to Danville.
Once they meet at a train station in Seattle, where Gus addresses
Tillie as "My Little Chickadee" (Fields' most famous catch phrase), the
couple soon forget their differences, offering their assistance to the
young couple by arranging a ferry boat race between the defunct Fairy
Queen and Pratt's very own Keystone that's to take place on the 4th of
July, with amusing results.
For Fields' first starring feature role since the silent era of 1928,
TILLIE AND GUS offers great promise with fine comedy material (Fields
and Skipworth as dedicated missionaries shown in their true
surroundings; W.C. cheating suckers at cards and his mixing of paint
while listening to the instructor on radio), offbeat one-liners
(Tillie: "Do you like children?" Gus: "I do if they're properly
cooked"), and a touch of suspense (Baby LeRoy in a mini-bathtub that
falls off the deck and floating down the river), there's not enough to
rank this the comedy classic as Fields' latter IT'S A GIFT (1934) and
THE BANK DICK (1940). In some ways, it's a quiet comedy in the Will
Rogers tradition, highlighted by both the steamboat race and the
support of familiar faces as Edgar Kennedy, George Barbier, Barton
MacLane, and of course Clarence Wilson, whose face is enough to
frighten any child away from his property whenever ordering them to
"scoot." Baby LeRoy, the year-old infant whose dialog consists of
overdubbed baby noises, cries and laughter, makes one of Fields' better
known advisories under the age of five.
Never distributed on video cassette, TILLIE AND GUS was one of the
features presented on Turner Classic Movies in June 2001 with W.C.
Fields as its "Star of the Month," before being placed to DVD a few
years later. Although Fields and Skippy would be paired once more in
SIX OF A KIND (1934), who else can play phony missionaries and he
singing "Bringing in the Sheeves" as their lovable characters of Tillie
and Gus? (**1/2)
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Tillie and Gus (1933)
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

Very funny, 18 June 2001
Author: zetes from Saint Paul, MN
A light comedy, certainly, not on par with Fields' classics such as The Bank Dick, It's a Gift, and That Old-Fashioned Way, but Tillie and Gus is still a fine 1930s comedy. And Fields is in top form, with several great set pieces - a crooked card game, making paint, and throwing firewood down to the boiler room. Alison Skipworth is also quite good. The only major disappointment is Baby LeRoy, who, in his first pairing with Fields, was probably just too young. He's still cute and mischievous, but he and Fields never go at it in the same way as they do in That Old-Fashioned Way and It's a Gift. Even more creepy is the fact that Baby LeRoy's voice had to be dubbed, probably because he wouldn't make the required noises. This makes him seem like the antichrist - even more so. 8/10
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

One of Fields' "sleepers", Tillie and Gus is a great curiosity., 30 March 2001
Author: duguidb from Carol Stream, IL
"Tillie And Gus" is a "Sleeper" for W.C. Fields. It is not one of his movies that he is best remembered for, but it has several components that make it a great curiosity. First of all, Fields is teamed up again with Alison Skipworth, the craggy character actress, who in her earlier stage career in England was known to be a great beauty. She is also as far as I'm concerned, Fields' greatest female co-star. She interacts with him well as she did in "If I Had A Million" and "Six of A Kind". The two are formerly man and wife in this saga, working as "missionaries" on different locations who are found out for their flim-flam ways and sent packing back home where they are summoned to the dockside of a niece, her husband and infant son (Baby Leroy), who are being swindled out of their inheritance by shyster lawyer Phineas Pratt. The niece owns a run-down riverboat, threatened to be put in mothballs by a newer boat. A race is run to determine which boat has superiority over the other, and who keeps the river franchise. Fields' and Skipworth's goals is to help win the race, receive the money to thwart Pratt, and to kick the bum out! Memorable scenes include The "Missionaries" working together to refix a poker game on the train to their benefit, and Fields' memorable line to the question "You like children?". "Only if they are properly cooked", he says. This film is seldom seen on television and never seen as a video. The rights to this and many other Fields' films are buried in the vaults of Universal Pictures. It should be released for all of us to see again.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

The One Attempt at Pairing in Fields' Talkie Career, 22 September 2005
Author: theowinthrop from United States
TILLIE AND GUS was one of three films (four with the "all star" ALICE IN WONDERLAND) where he appeared with Alison Skipworth. It was the only time in his talking films where Fields was actually built into a co-starring situation with a partner. The only similar situation he faced were in those now obscure silent comedies he made in the late 1920s co-starring Chester Conklin. But here, in SIX OF A KIND (where pairs of male/female partners were enhanced by Burns and Allen and Charlie Ruggles and Mary Boland), and IF I HAD A MILLION (in the "road hog" sequence) the chemistry and balance between "Uncle Claude" and "Skippy" was amply demonstrated. Skipworth was nobody's fool in her comic roles, and here she fully demonstrates that she is capable of confronting her thoroughly untrustworthy partner, and even (occasionally) controlling him.
Fields and Skipworth are married relatives of a young woman (Julie Bishop) who has inherited some property, including an old ferry boat. Unfortunately, the estate is in the hands of a crooked lawyer (Clarence Wilson), who is trying to gain legal ownership by every trick he knows. Fields and Skipworth return to assist their niece, her husband (Philip Trent) and their baby son (Baby Leroy - his first film with Fields). Despite Fields' grumblings, his own dislike for Wilson makes him stick it out to assist the young people.
The film is funny, but in episodes. At the beginning we see Fields, before he returns to the town where Bishop is) facing a trial in another jurisdiction. His repartee with the Judge (the great Edgar Kennedy) is a marvel. Another high spot (in a bit that other comedians have used - like Lou Costello on his television show), is when Fields is trying to repair part of the ferry boat, listening to instructions on the radio, but in leaving the room misses an important piece of information that the radio repairman is now discussing another thing to repair, and so Fields gets hopelessly befuddled trying to understand the logic of what he is accomplishing by these instructions.
Skipworth had a nice moment or two also. Wilson has purchased a modern ferry boat to drive the old one out of business. George Barbier is it's captain. Skipworth goes at night to spy out the new craft, and possibly find some way to damage it. Barbier, also on the watch sees her, and goes down to confront this interloper.
Barbier: "Do you know who I am?" Skipworth: "No! Isn't there somebody around to tell you?" Barbier hesitates - he did not anticipate that answer. He continues. Barbier: "I'm the Captain of the "Keystone"." Skipworth (looking him over): "Then what are you worried about?!" Barbier, slightly confused about the way the conversation has gone, but deciding to try once more. Barbier: "You don't understand...." Skipworth (without missing a beat): "I'm not the one who is lost!"
TILLY AND GUS is truly a very amusing movie to watch
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Alison Skipworth & W. C. Fields In Comedy Caper, 25 August 2001
Author: Ron Oliver (revilorest@juno.com) from Forest Ranch, CA
Sometimes it takes a crook to catch a crook. Thus enter TILLIE AND GUS Winterbottom, charlatans both, come to the rescue of their niece who's been cheated out of her inheritance by a shyster lawyer.
Alison Skipworth & W. C. Fields are a wonderful team in this little comedy, full of slapstick and verbal wisecracks. Eventually partnered in three films at Paramount - IF I HAD A MILLION (1932); TILLIE AND GUS (1933); SIX OF A KIND (1934); their characters only appeared together for a few seconds at the banquet climax of ALICE IN WONDERLAND (1933) - they played off each other beautifully. Theirs is one of the great unsung comedic duos in screen history.
Fields is terrific, as always. His two great scenes - the poker game & the paint mixing debacle - are played with great aplomb. Watching him handily defeat lesser crooks than himself is a real treat, whether it's the three cardsharps or the sour old lawyer. Never deigning to smarten up a chump, he is surprisingly warm with Baby LeRoy, in their first screen encounter. Always fascinating, never dull, W. C. Fields is secure in his place as the American cinema's greatest curmudgeon.
The formidably talented Skipworth (1863-1952), English born & bred, usually played comic, cultured ladies. Seventeen years older than Fields (unlike Tillie Winterbottom, she was not born in 1881), she was 70 the year she made TILLIE AND GUS. With her massive presence and clarion voice, she was an agile match for Fields' well known scene stealing techniques. Easily the most significant of all his movie matrons, it is unfortunate that today she is remembered primarily for her films with Fields, and not for the rest of her splendid work.
Julie Bishop & Phillip Trent do nicely as the young couple. Since they are already wed & with baby when the film commences there are no unnecessary romantic complications for the plot to deal with. Old Clarence Wilson once again does very well as an acid tongued villain. George Barbier is quaintly befuddled as the rival boat captain. And in his one scene as a harassed judge, Edgar Kennedy runs his hilarious slow burn around the block one more time.
The ferry boat race with which the film climaxes - the Fairy Queen versus the Keystone - is well produced, with elements of hilarity & suspense equally mixed into the sequence.
Before TILLIE AND GUS, W. C. Fields had already appeared in five talking full-length films, but always as one of the featured players. With this picture, the Paramount bosses felt he was at last ready to co-star in a movie, although he & Alison Skipworth still receive below the title billing. After a few more films Fields would begin to solo star in a series of comedy classics.
Missionaries: Impossible, 28 June 2008
Author: lugonian from Kissimmee, Florida
TILLIE AND GUS (Paramount, 1933), directed by Francis Martin, stars W.C. Fields and Alison Skipworth, in their second collaboration together following their hilarious "roadhog" segment from the episodic motion picture, IF I HAD A MILLION (1932). With Fields and Skipworth as Paramount's answer to MGM's own Wallace Beery and Marie Dressler, of MIN AND BILL (1930) and TUGBOAT ANNIE (1933) fame, the plot for TILLIE AND GUS could very well be Paramount's equivalent to TUGBOAT ANNIE (1933), however, the only difference is that there's no need in borrowing from MGM or calling this one TUGBOAT TILLIE, for example, considering how Paramount has Fields and Skipworth at the helm is all that's needed in keeping this 58 minute comedy afloat.
The story begins not with Tillie and Gus but with the introduction of a young married couple, Tom (Clifford Jones) and Mary Sheridan (Jacqueline Wells), along with their baby boy called "King" (Baby LeRoy) and their very smart pet duck, taking up residence in the town of Danbury. After the reading of the will by Mary's father, John Blake, who died bankrupt, Phineas Platt (Clarence Wilson), a family lawyer and a crooked one at that, loots the estate for himself, leaving the girl nothing but an old ferry boat, forcing Tom, a college student, from obtaining his engineering degree. Mary, who has notified her Aunt Tillie and Uncle Gus, working their separate ways as missionaries, of the situation, hopes they'll come over to guide them. Enter Augustus Q. Winterbottom (W.C. Fields), revealed not as a missionary as depicted, but a professional card sharp forced to leave Alaska by a judge (Edgar Kennedy) following a crooked game; and Tillie Winterbottom (Alison Skipworth), his ex-wife, owner of a Soo Chow Club in Shanghai, China, who, after received Mary's telegram, gambles away her place to the Swede (Ivan Linow), earning enough money to book passage to Danville. Once they meet at a train station in Seattle, where Gus addresses Tillie as "My Little Chickadee" (Fields' most famous catch phrase), the couple soon forget their differences, offering their assistance to the young couple by arranging a ferry boat race between the defunct Fairy Queen and Pratt's very own Keystone that's to take place on the 4th of July, with amusing results.
For Fields' first starring feature role since the silent era of 1928, TILLIE AND GUS offers great promise with fine comedy material (Fields and Skipworth as dedicated missionaries shown in their true surroundings; W.C. cheating suckers at cards and his mixing of paint while listening to the instructor on radio), offbeat one-liners (Tillie: "Do you like children?" Gus: "I do if they're properly cooked"), and a touch of suspense (Baby LeRoy in a mini-bathtub that falls off the deck and floating down the river), there's not enough to rank this the comedy classic as Fields' latter IT'S A GIFT (1934) and THE BANK DICK (1940). In some ways, it's a quiet comedy in the Will Rogers tradition, highlighted by both the steamboat race and the support of familiar faces as Edgar Kennedy, George Barbier, Barton MacLane, and of course Clarence Wilson, whose face is enough to frighten any child away from his property whenever ordering them to "scoot." Baby LeRoy, the year-old infant whose dialog consists of overdubbed baby noises, cries and laughter, makes one of Fields' better known advisories under the age of five.
Never distributed on video cassette, TILLIE AND GUS was one of the features presented on Turner Classic Movies in June 2001 with W.C. Fields as its "Star of the Month," before being placed to DVD a few years later. Although Fields and Skippy would be paired once more in SIX OF A KIND (1934), who else can play phony missionaries and he singing "Bringing in the Sheeves" as their lovable characters of Tillie and Gus? (**1/2)
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