I saw this on "You Tube" this evening, and found it amusing.
In the 19th Century one of the last major Victorian writers of note was Samuel Butler. His is a strange reputation: He actually wrote three fictional works (though they are still read) called EREWHON, EREWHON REVISITED, and THE WAY OF ALL FLESH. He also wrote translations of Homer's ILIAD and ODYSSEY (prose translations, not poetic translations), and was involved in several major literary and scientific disputes regarding Darwin's theory of Evolution and Homer's actual personality. For a man with a relatively small output Butler left still impressive literary footprints. Many college courses include THE WAY OF ALL FLESH among classic Victorian novels.
The novel actually deals with Butler's youth, and his disillusion with the Anglican Church and organized religion due to his feelings his father (a clergyman) was a hypocrite. As far as I know the novel has not been turned into a movie following the actual story. Yet two films were made (in 1927 and 1942) with the same title. This by itself is unimportant, but the first one starred Emil Jannings and was one of the two films cited by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science as the performances that earned Jannings the first Oscar for best actor. The other film, THE LAST COMMAND (directed by Josef Von Sternberg) still exists and shows how wonderful an actor Jannings was (although he proved to be too much a political opportunist for his reputations' sake). But except for a very brief sequence most of the 1927 THE WAY OF ALL FLESH has vanished. We can tell what it was like from written descriptions and from the 1942 version starring Akim Tamiroff, but we probably would find the 1927 version well worth having if it was still in existence.
The film dealt with how a man is twisted up by circumstances into pretending he was dead in order for his family to retain their belief in his honesty and decency. As a result he is unable to grow old watching his family develop and become happy adults.
Now, the same year that Victor Fleming directed Jannings in THE WAY OF ALL FLESH, Charlie Chase made this comedy which (for all I know) has no relationship to the film with Jannings. Chase (like Stan Laurel) titled films after current movie favorites. He did one called THE LIGHTER THAT FAILED. So instead of THE WAY OF ALL FLESH we have THE WAY OF ALL PANTS.
The story is simple (even though the film appears to be missing some scenes today). Chase is a tailor or haberdasher who is supposed to get a pair of pants made as a gift for a jealous husband from his wife. The husband already has his suspicions about Chase (he sees him in his business office apparently fooling around with the wife - actually she is using Chase to measure her husband's size and contours for the pants. He shows up at the mansion of the man and his wife, and the wife demands that Chase try on the pants so she can see how they look. Unfortunately the husband is arriving with guests (important ones) for a dinner party - and the husband sees Chase at his bedroom window undressing. Panicking, the husband asks a local busybody (who fancies himself a detective) to get Chase out of the mansion without any scenes.
Of course the reverse happens. Chase has trouble with a small dog who steals his pants, and then Chase rips the man's pants and is walking half uncovered (except for his underwear) and half with his right leg in a trouser leg. He tries to recover the pants only to find the idiot detective holding them, and then ripping them accidentally. Soon the detective, Chase, and a butler are running around without pants (Hal Roach may have made a mental note of all this - Stan Laurel too, because soon a Laurel & Hardy short would involve pants being torn off various men in a street brawl). The dinner is affected by these shenanigans, as well as one of the male guests apparently playing "footsie" with a female guest under the table (it is Charlie accidentally stroking the woman's ankle). The woman also adds to the confusion when she pours some wine onto Charle, and he momentarily thinks the family dog peed on him.
It does become a one-joke situation comedy, but the variations on that joke work out well. And the doomed dinner party in THE WAY OF ALL PANTS can take it's place next to the doomed party in Laurel & Hardy's FROM SOUP TO NUTS made about the same time.
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