Ed (Andy Clyde) and his friend Homer (Eddie Gribbon) go on a hunting trip along with Ed's daughter. A bear winds up chasing the trio.

Is this actually worth your time? Honestly? Only if you have a soft spot for 1930s slapstick that doesn't quite know what it wants to be. If you’re looking for a coherent story, you’re in the wrong place. But if you want to see people running in circles while a bear does absolutely nothing, pull up a chair. The whole ...

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Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Babe Stafford

Lloyd Ingraham
Community
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"Is this actually worth your time? Honestly? Only if you have a soft spot for 1930s slapstick that doesn't quite know what it wants to be. If you’re looking for a coherent story, you’re in the wrong place. But if you want to see people running in circles while a bear does absolutely nothing, pull up a chair. The whole thing feels like it was put together in a basement while the writers were arguing about lunch. Andy Clyde is there, doing his usual thing, and he’s fine. But the bear? The bear loo..."
King Tut the Dog
Harry McCoy, Ewart Adamson, Gene Towne, Walter Weems, Hal Yates, Arthur Ripley, Earle Rodney, John A. Waldron, Phil Whitman
United States

1931 · IMDb 6

