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March Of The Wooden Soldiers (1934)
Released By: Goodtimes Home Video   Rating: Not Rated   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Goodtimes Home Video
Genre: Children's
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Director: Charles Rogers
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Charlotte Henry, Oliver Hardy, Stan Laurel
Published ID: 3391
UPC: 018713810564, 025493553390, 025493071696, 796019795845, 883904118190, 844503000590,
Plot: March of the Wooden Soldiers is the 1952 reissue title for Hal Roach's 1934 film version of Victor Herbert's Babes in Toyland. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy star as Stannie Dum and Ollie Dee, bumbling apprentices to the master toymaker of Toyland. This joyous fairy-tale community is populated by all the colorful Mother Goose characters we know and love; the one sour apple in the barrel is mean old Silas Barnaby (portrayed by Henry Kleinbach, aka Henry Brandon). Barnaby holds the mortgage on the outsized shoe where Widow Peep (Florence Roberts) and her daughter Little Bo Peep (Charlotte Henry) reside, and where Stannie and Ollie pay room and board. Bo Peep will be forced to marry the odious Barnaby if the rent isn't paid, so Stannie and Ollie try to raise the money by asking the toymaker for a raise. But the boys are fired when Stannie messes up an order from Santa Claus: instead of making six hundred toy soldiers one foot high, the dumb Mr. Dum makes one hundred toy soldiers six feet high. The wedding between Barnaby and Bo Peep goes on as planned--except that it's Stannie, disguised as the bride, who ends up walking down the altar. Publicly humiliated, Barnaby vows revenge. He steals one of the Three Little Pigs and places the blame on Bo Peep's boy friend, Tom-Tom the Piper's Son (Felix Knight). The penalty for pignapping is banishment to Bogeyland, a fearsome subterranean world populated by hideous bogeymen (look closely and you'll see the zippers on their costumes!) Stannie and Ollie expose Barnaby's perfidy and rescue Tom-Tom from Bogeyland, whereupon Barnaby rallies the bogeymen and leads an all-out attack on Toyland. Taking refuge in the toy warehouse, Stannie and Ollie activate the 100 6-foot wooden soldiers (a neat bit of stop-motion photography, courtesy of Hal Roach's fx wizard Roy Seawright), who vanquish the Bogeymen and save the day. One of the best of all the Laurel and Hardy features, March of the Wooden Soldiers has been a television holiday perennial ever since the cathode tube was invented. Only a handful of Victor Herbert's songs are utilized, but these lilting compositions more than compensate for the omissions (one song, I Can't Do That Sum, is used as the leitmotif for the clueless Stannie and Ollie). For years available only in the 70-minute reissue version, March of the Wooden Soldiers has recently been fully restored to its full glorious 78 minutes. The parent property Babes in Toyland was remade by Disney in 1961 (with Gene Sheldon and Henry Calvin as Laurel and Hardy wannabes) and for television in 1986, with new songs by Leslie Bricusse. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
A Big Disappointment!
Added 11/10/2009

Being a definitive fan of Laurel and Hardy, and having a special place in my heart for "Babes In Toyland" (aka "March of the Wooden Soldiers"), I was excited to add another version to my DVD collection.

Alas, the colorization from Legend Films is a big disappointment. Already in possession of the excellent 2001 Goodtimes Home Video release, in which the colorization truly does approximate the technicolor look, I feel as though I have wasted my money. As for the black and white print, also included on the DVD, is a much poorer rendering than the pristine black and white version available through MGM Home Video.

The extras on the Legends release are nothing new. They have been included on other L&H releases by other companies, so there is nothing gained there.

Over all, I would suggest that if your heart is set on having a colorized version of this particular feature, stick with the 2001 Goodtimes version. The effect is much more pleasing to those of us wanting a "technicolor" appearence. As for the black and white version, stick with MGM's release. It truly is the best print available.

Sorry, Legend Films. You've missed the mark on this one!

2 out of 3 people found this helpful.
A classic!
Added 9/12/2009

I grew up on the east coast. Every Thanksgiving March of the Wooden Soldiers ran on TV. As a kid this meant that Christmas was coming! Now I get to share this classic movie with my kids.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
This is a great holiday movie
Added 4/4/2009

Some like it colored and some don't. Ether way this based on a 1903 Victor Herbert operetta, film released in 1934 as "Babes in Toyland," and is still fun to watch.

Now the basic plot is to keep Mother Peep's (Florence Roberts) shoe from being foreclosed on by the evil landlord Silas Barnaby (Henry Brandon) when this fails Bo Peep has to marry Barnaby to keep the shoe. Now to keep Little Bo Peep from having to marry Barnaby, it involves Barnaby being tricked into marrying Stanley Dum dressed up as Bo in Bo Peep's place. Naturally Barnaby can not be fooled long and must have his revenge by letting lose the bogeymen from their caverns to destroy Toyland.

Does he succeed in his evil ways?
Who can stop him and how?

All in all it is a must to complete the holiday collection.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
A classic movie that brings back tons of memories...
Added 4/3/2009

One of the many things that made Christmas special in my home as a kid was opening gifts, eating a hearty breakfast and later watching March of the Wooden Soldiers. I'm glad this classic is now offered in DVD format, allowing me to share in those good times with my own family.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
BEAUTIFUL, BRILLIANT & DISTURBING FEVER-DREAM OF A MOVIE
Added 3/16/2009

On the far end of the musical movie spectrum is the colorized Laurel and Hardy "MARCH OF THE WOODEN SOLDIERS." As adapted from Victor Herbert's operetta "Babes in Toyland," there's more of the Holiday Spirit in this 1934 classic than in most of the insipidly lame attempts of movies that exploit the holiday season.

Dum (Stan) and Dee (Ollie) are Santa's toymakers preparing for the big delivery on Christmas eve. Mother Goose and nursery rhyme characters are all over the place and Stan and Ollie are in constant trouble ("Is that 100 six-foot toy soldiers or 600 one-footers?") Silas Barnaby, (remember "the meanest man in town"?), Bo Peep (she's being forced into marriage by Silas or he will evict Bo's mom, who is in fact The Old Woman In The Shoe). And there's Tom Tom the Piper's Son (Ms Peep's true love) and the big finale with the creepy attack of the Bogeymen.

This classic has been cleaned up, digitally remastered and colorized and looks about as perfect as the best of old style children's book illustrations and I bet Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy themselves would want this one in color. It's certainly no sacrilege. This is one beautiful, Fauvistic fever dream of a movie. A weirdly mesmerizing treat.

Laurel and Hardy forever! Let's all love each other, OK?

That said, there is something else to be considered.

For those who dare to read between the lines (or movie frames), this film can be seen as a sly and subversive horror fest that plumbs deeply disturbing psychological and political issues not touched on in contemporary films. I am amazed that someone hasn't examined this in detail and I have often wondered how much of it may have been intentional -- perhaps from the brilliantly demented mind of Stan Laurel. Only on the surface is this a children's movie.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Laurel and Hardy prevail!
Added 11/9/2009

One of "the boys" finest full length films. The March Of The Wooden Soldiers is based on the fairy tale, with musical segments added, the film has all the characters from the fairy tale and then some. The boys, as is typical, foul up an order for wooden soldiers which turns out to be a lifesaver. The scenes of the "Boogiemen" are scary for the youngsters but Stan and Ollie manage to save the day. A must for all L & H fans, and anyone who enjoys a good story.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
March of the Wooden Soldiers
Added 10/18/2009

This old time classic is great! I loved it as a kid when they would play it around the holidays. Now I own the dvd and am still trying to convince my 9 yr old that it is cool. He will come around....
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Laughed til I cried
Added 8/8/2009

This was my first introduction to Laurel and Hardy as a kid. The movie was a staple for Christmas time and, after watching this, Babes in Toyland seemed a bit dismal. Laurel and Hardy are at their comedic best, the fairytale images of their small town are breathtaking, the romance, the bogey men, and the crooked man who lives in a crooked house will make you laugh til you cry.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
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