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7/10
Stan And Ollie On The Barbary Coast
bkoganbing23 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
The Live Ghost finds Stan and Ollie back in the days of the Barbary Coast where having a crew shanghaied was a matter of course. But gruff captain Walter Long is having an especially hard time because of the rumors his ship is haunted. He gets Stan and Ollie to help him sucker a crew into being shanghaied and for good measure, shanghais the two of them.

That I often wondered about. Would you really want to sail on a clipper ship with Laurel and Hardy?

At this point Stan and Ollie get some real competition from actor Arthur Houseman whose portrayal of a drunken sailor almost steals this short subject from the stars. Stan in his usual fashion finds a pistol and discharges it and he thinks he's killed Houseman.

Now he and Ollie contrive to get rid of the body, but in the meantime Houseman has slipped in a vat of whitewash and when he reemerges from the briny deep, he's white and shiny. The predictable results do follow.

Stan and Ollie will please their legion of fans. But I wonder what they thought when they Houseman's performance nearly stealing the film from them. Stan especially put on a little extra shtick in the end.
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7/10
good silly fun
planktonrules24 May 2006
This is a pretty good Laurel and Hardy short--not among their best, but still very good and watchable. I think part of the reason it works so well is that Walter Long is an incredibly scary and effective foil for the team. I would be very scared if Long were chasing after me, thank you very much! The boys think they accidentally killed a shipmate while shanghaied aboard Long's ship. So the solution? Yep, put the guy in a bag and chuck him overboard!!! Well, the "dead guy" isn't really dead and when this bag starts moving, things get crazy. It's silly and stupid and funny to see this guy accidentally get turned white and Stan and Ollie think he's a ghost. Believable? No way--but fun!
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8/10
Anything for a Buck
Hitchcoc16 January 2017
Stan and Ollie, in their usually unemployed and semi-destitute state, are hired by a ship's captain (the frightening Walter Long) to shanghai sailors because no one wants to sail with him (they say he has a ghost ship). Unfortunately for them, they are knocked unconscious and end up with a crew that despises them. On board the ship is a drunk, played by Arthur Housman, who falls in a bucket of whitewash and is mistaken for a dead man. Stan and Ollie throw him overboard but he quickly makes it back on board. Of course, he is immediately mistaken for a ghost and Long is furious. The guys are under his protection, but all bets are suddenly off because he has no more use for them. Mae Busch is soon present as a doxie and a merry chase begins. Just another fine comedy from the amazing twosome.
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Good all round film
bob the moo5 July 2003
Laurel and Hardy are hanging out around a port with no money when they hear of a ship that needs a crew – the captain can't get a man to join him because they believe his ship to be haunted. Laurel and Hardy agree to help the captain for payment by knocking out men and putting them on the ship. Things go well until Laurel and Hardy are also knocked out and loaded onto the ship – with a none too friendly crew – however the captain says he will protect them while they are onboard. Staying onboard at every port, Laurel and Hardy are put in charge of looking after a drunken crew member. A confusion over a gun leads them into panic over a `live ghost'.

The Live Ghost is a good short that could easily have been expanded into a longer film were it not for the tenuous `ghost' climax. As it stands it has a reasonable plot with very good characters. Unlike some of their shorts this feels like one idea that has been expanded into a 3 or 4 scene story as opposed to 2 good scenes worked into a story. As such it feels a lot more like a film than a sketch and is the better for it. The onshore scenes are good and the action on the ship, although a little stretched, is well delivered and very funny.

Laurel and Hardy are, of course, excellent, and it is their delivery that makes the conclusion (the live ghost of the title) work rather than seeming laboured in terms of plotting. The support cast is also good and well served. Rather than being just goons or fall guys, the actors all feel like characters – Walter Long as the frustrated captain (`I heard your ship has a ghost' - `stop SAYING that!') was my favourite and gave the film a more rounded feel that went beyond Laurel and Hardy while still keeping them very much at the core.

Overall this is an enjoyable film that is an all round showcase for the talents of Laurel and Hardy. Their delivery makes the material much funnier than it could have been, and the plot and a good cast add to the feeling of this being more than just a sketch stretched to several scenes.
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6/10
Not too bad Warning: Spoilers
"The Live Ghost" is a 20-minute black-and-white short film from over 80 years ago starring Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, the most famous comedy duo in film history. And in this movie from their days of sound film, they show us their talent. It is a bit spooky, certainly more of a supernatural/ghost impact than most of their other work, but somehow it is still a success. I am a bit critical with some of their other films and I would not call myself a huge fan, even if I like some of the stuff they have done. This is why I would call myself critical of their work. But I am okay with what they did here. Occasionally, it gets a bit too noisy and chaotic in their attempts to be funny and entertaining, but it's not the entire film, only a couple situations. That's why my final verdict is thumbs-up. Worth checking out, but maybe not the best way to start with the Laurel&Hardy films if you are new to the duo as it really is not a trademark film of theirs.
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9/10
Laughter and fear are related
Shaolin_Apu31 January 2006
This Laurel & Hardy film makes great use of some their best regular supporting actors: Walter Long, Charlie Hall, Mae Busch and Arthur Housman. I don't know whether it gets enough often mentioned, but part of the hilarity of Stan's and Ollie's films are owed to these supporting actors too. For it is them who also become familiar to the viewer and therefore form an essential part of their humour in general. Knowing how tough guy Walter Long always is, you laugh twice as much at him than usual when you see that he does not care a bit when Stan hits his head with a pan. Another familiar laughing "bonus" is got from Charlie Hall's sadism and Housman plays again the drunk. Mae West's domina voice always guarantees you a freezing effect down at your stomach.

The film itself makes moderate use of the concepts laughter and fear. Hijacking crew into haunted ship is funny in itself too, but the Ghost that Stan & Ollie accidentally evoke crowns the whole show. This one definitely belongs into very essential Laurel & Hardy. It is a very pleasant viewing for both master and student.
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7/10
The Ghost Ship
boblipton30 December 2020
No one wants to ship on skipper Walter Long's ship. They all say it's haunted, and he gets violent whenever anyone repeats that. He pays Laurel and Hardy a dollar a head for helping him shanghai hands.... and then shanghais them. Add in Mae Busch as a waterfront floozie and you've got a good comedy.

Walter Long was the actor for the Boys whenever they wanted a real tough. He seems to have priced himself out of their market soon after this. A veteran of more than 200 features and shorts from 1910, he died on Independence Day in 1952 at the age of 73.
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10/10
Aboard A Haunted Ship With Mr. Laurel & Mr. Hardy
Ron Oliver19 March 2000
A LAUREL & HARDY Comedy Short. After helping a conniving captain kidnap seamen for his ship, Stan & Ollie end up shanghaied themselves. The trouble really starts, however, when the Boys accidentally `kill' one of their cabin mates. Dumping the body overboard, they are terrified to see THE LIVE GHOST stalking the decks.

Lots of laughs in this little film. Watching the Boys' reactions when they see the `ghost' is hilarious. That's Mae Busch as the captain's girlfriend.
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7/10
Follows The Formula Very Well
Theo Robertson22 April 2004
Watching THE LIVE GHOST I was reminded of how this short resembles very many other L&H shorts . This isn`t meant as a criticism in any way but it`s remarkable how many other films feature Stan and Ollie fishing , we see them do the same in BONNIE SCOTLAND and MURDER CASE and a few other of their laugh fests . Does anyone know if these two comedy greats were obsessed with fishing in real life ?

THE LIVE GHOST also shows the duo are at their funniest when Stan plays the hysterical coward who sadly deludes himself if he goes running to Ollie he might able to do something which a big mistake since Ollie plays an arrogant and hypocritical coward lecturing Stan that there`s nothing be afraid of . The script telegraphs what the pay of is going to be ( Not to mention the title ) with Stan running around squeling EEEE - EEEE - EEEE , Ollie howling OOOOHHH - OOOOOOHHH - OOOOHHH and this reviewer going Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha

The supporting cast of Long , Busch and Housman more or less play the parts that they do in all the other L&H shorts ( Again not a criticism ) so when all is said and done this is certainly one of the most typical short features with Stan and Ollie so is certainly worth watching
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8/10
Haunted Hijinks on the High Seas.
ExplorerDS678929 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Captain Long shuffles into the local tavern, looking for a crew to sail with, but none of the barflies want to set foot on his ship, fearing that it's "haunted." Walking along the doc, the captain sees Stan and Ollie fishing. They work over at the fish market, and today is their day off. The captain asks them if they'd like to make some easy money, by way of Shanghaiing him a crew from that tavern, a $1.00 a head. Stan and Ollie agree to this bargain and set about their task, by having Stan go in with a bag full of eggs, daring the men that they can't put one in their mouth without breaking it. They manage to do so, but a pop on the chin breaks the egg and the enraged drunk chases Stan outside where Ollie waits with a frying pan to clunk him. The ploy works numerous times, giving the captain a hull full of groggy drunks, until Ollie decides he should be the one to go in and fish them out. The egg trick doesn't go quite as planned, and Stan ends up not only clunking the guy, but also Ollie, and the captain, who then clunks him back.

When Stan and Ollie regain consciousness, they find themselves shanghaied as well, and the crew is acrimonious with them, but the captain warns them not to lay a finger on his "friends" until they go ashore. He also warns the crew to never mention ghosts to him, lest he twist their heads around 180 degrees. As a result, Stan and Ollie remain on board the ship for the ten times that they dock. The captain orders a drunken sailor to remain on the ship with them, but he sneaks off the ship anyway, placing a trunk in his bed. When deciding to turn in themselves, Stan finds a revolver and it accidentally misfires, hitting the trunk. Fearing they've killed the man, Stan and Ollie go off to get a sack to throw him off the ship before the others returned. Meanwhile, the drunken sailor fell into a vat of whitewash before he staggered back onto the ship and slipped into his bed, just as Stan and Ollie slip him into a sack and toss him overboard. Unfortunately, the water didn't wash off the whitewash, so when he climbed back aboard, they assumed he was a ghost and freak out like children. When the captain gets back, they tell him of their ghost sighting, and he fulfills his earlier promise of twisting their heads from north to south.

I wonder if it was the captain's plan all along to shanghai Stan and Ollie, even if Stan hadn't clunked him. I'm sure it was, as the man seemed pretty underhanded. As far as a critique, this one is really good. With Laurel and Hardy, you can seldom go wrong. This one is pretty funny and it even has a few creepy moments. Perfect to watch around the Halloween season. Other good spooky Laurel and Hardy shorts include Oliver the Eighth, The Laurel-Hardy Murder Case and Dirty Work, which were included with The Live Ghost on a video collection. So I definitely recommend The Live Ghost, still a funny romp after 80 years.
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6/10
All At Sea
JoeytheBrit2 December 2009
Laurel & Hardy head out to sea again in this Hal Roach short. In this one they're hired by the captain of a haunted ship to help him shanghai a crew for his next voyage. The plan is that Stan goes into a bar and annoys a sailor by crushing an egg in his mouth. When the angry sailor gives chase, Ollie's waiting outside the bar to whack him over the head so that the captain can throw him into the hold of the ship. Of course, when Stan and Ollie swap roles Stan gets it all wrong, and he and Ollie end up being shanghaied with their victims. Chaplin used a similar idea in one of his silent pictures, but once aboard ship this story goes off in a completely different direction, with the boys mistaking a drunken shipmate who has fallen into an improbably large tray of white paint for a ghost. The shanghai scenes are the best – after that you get the feeling they're just going through another day at the office. It's not their best work, but it'll do.
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8/10
Laurel & Hardy run in to a ghost...at least they think it is.
Boba_Fett11386 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This is Laurel & Hardy at their very best. A silly story and simple story that relies heavily on the comical timing of the actors. Its a Laurel & Hardy short that certainly does not disappoint.

The movie can yet again be divided into two separate parts. In the first part the boys meet up with a ship captain (Walter Long) who is looking for a crew. He has a hard time finding a crew, since the ship he owns is notorious among the sailors and is known to be haunted. The second part of the movie is set on the ship itself. It's the part in which the boys get into some hilarious trouble once more, this time with a ghost, who of course turns out to be not a real ghost at all.

Both parts are different in terms of the humor that is used. But both parts are hilarious in their very own way. The both parts may not really connect with each other, which doesn't make this the most consistent Laurel & Hardy shorts ever made but the silly and hilarious humor compensate for this, more than enough.

Another reason why this movie is better than the average Laurel & Hardy comical shorts is the presence of a couple of Laurel & Hardy regulars. Walter Long is great and bold as always. Arthur Housman does what he can do best, playing a drunk and Mea Busch is also present. Here presence might feel a bit out of place and perhaps even unnecessary but she just was a great comical actress, who also does provides some good laughs in this movie.

The movie does really has some great comical sequences in it, mainly when the two boys are being confronted by the 'ghost' and they start running and screaming, like a couple of 10-year old girls. It helps to make this comical short an highly amusing and memorable one.

Good first part and a good second, make a good movie overall.

8/10

http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
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7/10
Great start, but gets a little dull
rbverhoef23 April 2004
Warning: Spoilers
Possible spoilers.

'The Live Ghost' is a nice comedy short from Laurel & Hardy. They become sailors on a ship that is known as a haunted ship. For certain reasons they are not very loved by the other sailors, but as long as they are on the ship they are protected by the Captain. When the other sailors leave the ship Laurel and Hardy stay right where they are. Because they do that they have to watch one of the sailors who is always drunk and make sure that he will stay on board with them. Of course that doesn't go as planned. The drunken sailor leaves the ship and returns after Laurel thinks he has shot the sailor while laying in his bed. Of course the drunken man is mistaken for a ghost.

This comedy short starts great. The way Laurel & Hardy make sure that every single sailor will get on board the ship is hilarious. The scenes on the ship have their moments and gave me some smiles, but with a start this good it was a little disappointing. Still, a nice comedy short.
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5/10
Don't call on Laurel and Hardy. They ain't no Ghostbusters.
mark.waltz5 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Only moderately funny, this strange short has the boys responsible for dozen or so men being shanghai'd onto Walter Long's ship and being concerned over rumored ghosts aboard. A particular single line indicates exactly how this will end, and it really isn't all that funny visually. Series perennial Mae Busch is really wasted in this one, as a wife vowing revenge on her sailor husband who abandoned her. The setting is pretty dreary and the theme dark and never really all that interesting. As for the ghost in the title, it never is explained why the ship is rumored to be haunted, so any element of suspense is evaporated with the realization that nothing supernatural is going on.
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Two Minds Without A Single Thought
guidon727 December 2008
When the L&H Fan Club "The Sons of the Desert" was formed in the early 1960's, Stan, who had sustained a crippling stroke, nevertheless gave his blessing to the formation of the club and supplied the motto for it, which I have repeated above. (Another of his witticisms which I like is "You can lead a horse to water, but a pencil must be lead").

Theo Robertson in his comment above wondered whether either of the boys were fishermen. I don't believe Hardy was but Laurel in his younger days was a keen big game fisherman and fished regularly off Catalina Island for swordfish or marlin. Catalina Island, Theo, is about an hour boat trip from Los Angeles, for your information. He loved the water and had his own boat in those days.

In 1962 I visited Stan at his apartment in the Oceana Hotel in Santa Monica. A wonderful experience and a fond memory for this writer. One question I asked him was about Walter Long, the villain of villains in many of their films. His reply was that surprisingly, Long was one of the mildest men he had ever known and absolutely would not hurt a fly. That came as a big surprise for me.
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6/10
The Live Ghost
jboothmillard26 October 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. In a bar a boat Captain (Walter Long) wants men for his crew, but none of them are interested in sailing on a haunted tub. He hires Stan and Ollie to help recruit some men, by tricking them to run outside (with the egg breaking in mouth trick) and get clunked on the head by a pan, and the boys end up getting themselves clunked too. The Captain warns all the crew to not mention ghosts to him, or he'll twist those who say its heads right round, and this day the crew go ashore to have a break. The boys stay aboard to keep an eye on the Drunken sailor (Arthur Housman), who manages to sneak off, leaving some suitcases under a bed cover as a decoy. Stan finds a gun in the room, and accidentally shoots the wall, causing the suitcases to move, they think they have killed the guy, so they go to get a body bag to throw "him" overboard. The Drunk walking back to the boat falls into a pit of white paint, and after moving the suitcases and going back under his cover, the boys throw him overboard. He swims out and climbs back on board, and covered in white Stan screams thinking he is a ghost. When Ollie, with Stan following, go to investigate, the Drunk gets onto the top bunk, and when Ollie is sure he is talking to Stan, they both see the white covered guy come out, and they run screaming. The crew return wanting to get even with the boys, but they end up jumping overboard seeing the white Drunk, only the Captain and the Drunk's wife Maisie the Vamp, Blonde Floozy (Mae Busch) recognise. The film ends with the Captain twisting the boys' heads round to their backs when they mention the word "ghost" to him. Also starring Charlie Hall as Sailor at Table and Leo Willis as Sailor at Table. Filled with wonderful slapstick and all classic comedy you could want from a black and white film, it is an enjoyable film. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were number 7 on The Comedians' Comedian, and "Well, here's another nice mess you've gotten me into!" was number 60 on 100 Years, 100 Quotes. Good!
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8/10
Laurel & Hardy provide some good scare laughs in The Live Ghost
tavm31 October 2012
With today being Halloween, I thought I'd celebrate the day by watching some comedy teams' films that deal with various scary things. In this one, Stan & Ollie are offered some money by a ship captain (Walter Long) to shanghai some drunken men to work on his boat. They succeed but also end up on it themselves. Since those men are stuck with them, the boys are protected by the captain. So when Laurel & Hardy decide to stay at each port, the captain orders them to keep an eye on one really drunk sailor (Arthur Housman) from leaving. That's when the fun really begins...It took a while but as the short kept on, I really found myself laughing especially when Stan gets really scared and then Ollie becomes so as well. Housman really piles his standard drunk act to hilarious results. Oh, and a threat from Long results in yet another freak ending Stan usually likes to employ to outrageous effect. So on that note, The Live Ghost gets a high recommendation from me.
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9/10
Haunting fun
TheLittleSongbird1 November 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.

A vast majority of Laurel and Hardy's output ranged from above average to very good, only consider '45 Minutes from Hollywood' of their previous efforts a misfire. 'The Live Ghost' is not one of their best or one of my favourites, but it is close and is still lots of haunting fun. Their filmography was variable before 'Two Tars', from then on the overall quality was better and more consistent.

Didn't find the ending that much of a surprise, anybody who is familiar with their "another fine mess" endings will sort of know what to expect.

'The Live Ghost' is otherwise non-stop funniness from start to finish, with another one of the better first halves for any Laurel and Hardy effort from personal opinion. There is insane craziness that doesn't get too silly, a wackiness that rarely loses its energy and the sly wit is here, some of the material may not be massively innovative but how it's executed actually feels fresh and it doesn't get repetitive. Love the reactions to the "ghost", hilarious indeed. On top of the comic touches, there is some genuine spookiness and suspense as well.

Laurel and Hardy are on top form here, both are well used, both have material worthy of them and they're equal rather than one being funnier than the other (before Laurel tended to be funnier and more interesting than Hardy, who tended to be underused). Their chemistry feels like a partnership here too, before 'Two Tars' you were yearning for more scenes with them together but from that point and in 'The Live Ghost' we are far from robbed of that.

'The Laurel-Hardy Murder Case' looks good visually, nicely shot with some appropriately creepy touches, has energy and the direction gets the best out of the stars, is at ease with the material and doesn't let it get too busy or static. The supporting players are solid, especially Walter Long who is quite frightening here.

Concluding, great. 9/10 Bethany Cox
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9/10
A drunken 'ghost', a shanghied crew, and L&H in the thick of things. Very Funny!
weezeralfalfa14 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
You may see this L&H comedy short at YouTube, either in its B&W form or colorized form. I found the latter to be unacceptably blurry.. This film relies more on situation comedy and sight gags, and less on slapstick and verbal comedy than most of their films........It's about a captain(played by intimidating Walter Long) of a small ship, plagued by a reputation for harboring one or more ghosts. For this reason, he has to mostly rely on shanghaied sailors. He enlists the aid of Stan and Ollie to round up a new crew. Their technique is to get a particular sailor in a nearby tavern angry enough to chase Stan outside, where Ollie is waiting with a frying pan. Stan makes them mad by betting them that they can't hold an egg in their mouth without breaking it. They guess this is an easy task. However, Stan then punches them under the chin, and usually that's sufficient to break the egg. This trick worked wonderfully for quite a few sailors, whom the Captain carried to the ship and tossed in the hold. But Then Ollie feared that Stan was becoming too well known, so had then switch roles. On his first try, Ollie encounters a problem. The intended victim is wise to the trick, and demands that Ollie demonstrate that he can pass the test first. After Ollie inserts the egg, this sailor punches his jaw, and Ollie has to swallow the broken egg. Ollie then puts another egg in the sailors mouth, and punches him along with pushing his head down. He chases Ollie outside, but Stan misses few times with the pan, then finally hits Ollie, followed by the sailor. Meanwhile , the Captain has returned for another victim, and the confused Stan bonks him on the head too. But, being Walter Long, he doesn't seem to feel anything. So, he grabs the pan from Stan and bonks him on the head, which knocks him out. The Captain takes the boys on board, along with the sailor. When the others wake up, they want to tear Stan and Ollie apart, but the Captain says they are honored guests, and he will not stand for any roughing them up, unless they utter the word, 'ghost', in which case, he will screw their necks around so that they will now see what's in back of them. ........The boys share a bunk with a habitual falling down drunk(played by Arthur Housman). Why the Captain puts up with him is a mystery. At a distant port of call, the Captain forbids him to go ashore, while all the others, except of the boys, go to a tavern. The boys are supposed to make sure the drunk doesn't go ashore. But, he tricks them by making a dummy, placed under his blanket, then going ashore. The boys, across from his bunk, get ready for bed, but Stan finds a pistol in their bunk. He points this at Ollie, who tries to grab it, but makes Stan pull the trigger, shooting a bullet into the dummy, which flinches. They fear they may have killed the drunk, who doesn't move. Thus, they plan to dump the body overboard, after they find a body bag, which they go looking for. Meanwhile, the drunk has fallen into a tub of whitewash on shore(what's it doing there?), and comes out all white. He returns, dismantles the dummy, and pulls the blanket over his head, after getting on the bed. The boys return with a bag, and carefully load the 'body' in the bag. Presumably, the drunk is so out of it, he doesn't notice. After adding a big lump of coal for weight, they slip the 'body' over the side, but don't wait long to make sure it sinks. In fact, the drunk emerges from the poorly secured top of the bag, and swims to the boat, climbing over the railing to scare Stan, on deck, who assumes it's the ghost of the body they just threw into sea. While Stan and Ollie are looking around the deck for the ghost, the drunk goes into the bunk room , and climbs into the upper berth of the boys, rather than his lower birth, across from them. Ollie returns to the bunk room, and gets in bed beside the drunk, whose head is covered by the blanket, and whom he assumes is Stan. But, he sees Stan outside the window, and makes a frightening discovery. He jumps out of bed, and the 2 run around the deck, screaming about a ghost, who also jumped out of bed, and is chasing them. Meanwhile, a bunch of the crew has come board with the purpose of 'taking care' of the boys. Very fortunately for the boys, this gang sees the 'ghost', panic and all jump overboard. Then the Captain arrives, with a floozy(Mae Busch) he picked up in the tavern. They don't see the drunk as being a ghost. But, the floozy recognizes him under the white stuff, to be her husband, who deserted her. She cases after him. Meanwhile, the boys forget that the Captain is present, and talk about a ghost. The Captain carries out his threat of punishment if anyone mentioned 'ghost' on his ship........Yes, it's a pretty tall tale, but it's also fun.
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8/10
Better Than Most
I've been watching (or re-watching) many of Laurel and Hardy's films, and having just seen "The Live Ghost" for the first time, I can say with certainty that it's one of their better efforts I think. Perhaps not top shelf, but better than most.

Plot In a Nutshell: Two friends (Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy) help a ship's captain kidnap unwilling sailors to fill out his crew, then find themselves onboard that same ship...and it's rumored to be haunted!

Why I rated it an '8': Well, to sum up succinctly, it was funny! When Stan is trying to subdue Charlie Hall so that he can be kidnapped, but winds up clanging everyone on the head with a frying pan, it felt like he was channeling the best of Harpo Marx. Good stuff. When the boys think they've killed a bunkmate...as morbid as that sounds...well, how they handle it....that's funny too. But my favorite scene was Ollie's reaction when he realizes the guy next to him in his bunk is not Stan but....a ghost? That was so good I had to rewind and watch it again lol.

"The Live Ghost" contains "some exceptionally good individual sequences" and has "some good, lively slapstick" as well, according to William Everson, who penned a filmography of L&H's work. I agree with most of his assessments, and this one, too. "The Live Ghost" is a keeper!

8/10. The ending does contain a recycled joke that had been previously used in "Going Bye-Bye!," which was a little disappointing. But otherwise this was a pretty good one from the boys!
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5/10
The boys are shanghaied onto what they think is a ghost ship...
Doylenf28 December 2008
Frankly, I've enjoyed other Laurel and Hardy shorts much more than this effort from 1934. It's predictable from start to finish with the laughs centered around the boys helping a ship's captain to round up a crew for his ship and then getting hoodwinked themselves into joining the crew.

The laughs revolve mainly around a drunken sailor who is mistaken for a ghost when he becomes covered in white liquid. The boys throw him off the ship when Stan's examination of a revolver leads to him firing a shot at the man's bunk. Thinking he's dead, they throw him overboard and then go into a panic when he comes aboard ship again still appearing like a ghost.

It's mercifully a short that doesn't overstay its welcome. The laughs are strictly for the team's die-hard fans who will undoubtedly enjoy this more than I did.

Summing up: Silly and predictable nonsense.
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10/10
DON'T SAY GHOST!
tcchelsey30 June 2022
Stan and Ollie get shanghaied on sea captain Walter Long's broken down boat --all because nobody wants to board it because its rumored to be haunted!

The rest is hilarious with the boys in some creepy situations. Best of the lot; being chased by a "drunken" ghost who turns out to be Mae Busch's husband, played by Arthur Housman. Nobody could play a drunk better than Housman, who reportedly, never drank in his life. Another fun scene finds Long asking Busch (as Maisie, the vamp!) to marry him? Mae's double takes are priceless. Look for Charlie Hall as a sailor, and other familiar faces who pop up in the team's films.

The weather-beaten boat set was also used by Our Gang/Little Rascals in SHIVER MY TIMBERS. Wacky stuff only Laurel and Hardy could pull off and wait for the bizzaro ending when Long finally has the LAST word. Always on remastered dvd, but watch for European releases that do not play on American-made players. Thanks to METV for running these short films on their Classic Comedy showcase.
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8/10
Just don't say the word ghost
coltras358 August 2021
A gruff sea captain, who absolutely detests the word "ghost," is having trouble manning his ship because of the rumor it's...well...haunted. He hires Stanley and Oliver into help him Shanghai some men, but they end up getting Shanghai'd too!

Another funny L & H which moves briskly expertly fitting all the gags in such short time. The best scene when one of the drunken sailor falls in white paint and our duo thinks it's a ghost. Not the best entry, but it's still good, and I just love the atmosphere and the "ghost" ship. The supporters actors, especially the one who plays the captain, are great.
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10/10
ship of spirits
lee_eisenberg6 September 2017
"The Live Ghost" is one of those comedies in which they set up what's about to happen. In this case, Stan and Ollie are aboard a supposedly haunted ship, and a drunken sailor under their watch accidentally falls into a vat of whitewash, causing him to look like a ghost. Guess what happens thereafter! It just goes to show that sometimes humor can be simple and do wonders. Without a doubt Laurel and Hardy were the masters of this humor. As usual, Ollie suffers more due to Stan's idiocy and gullibility. Hard to believe that just ten years earlier Laurel and Hardy weren't a comedy team, but they took the world by storm once they joined up.

Funny movie.
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