"The Little Rascals" was the original after-school special, seemingly on a local TV loop that ran every day of the week. Those kids and that dog were everywhere.
The shorts looked old even in the '50s and '60s, and the adults insisted on calling them "Our Gang" comedies, but no one seemed to mind: These inventive kids from the past always were worth hanging out with.
Almost 80 years after the debut of the first talkie on "The Little Rascals: The Complete Collection
," the kids still are all right. The raw energy, big laughs and sly shenanigans all resonate in the new century. As far as early talkies go, this stuff holds up as well as anything. Funnier than quite a few modern sitcoms, in fact.
Richard Bann, who co-wrote a book about the Rascals
, sums up the appeal: The series had "unmistakable charm and style. Sure you had spectacular gags ... and slapstick, but you also find heart. In these films you find real people, people you like, people you can identify with."
Another reason for the series' enduring appeal is the unusual amount of location shooting done by Hal Roach Studios. Rather than hang around a stage, the kids (several generations of 'em) played out their adventures on the streets and vacant lots of Culver City, Calif.
The location shooting made the dinky L.A. suburb "America's second home," as one "Rascals" expert puts it on the DVD set. As time capsules, these shorts offer a pretty good idea of what it was like in sleepy cities way back then.
"The Little Rascals: The Complete Collection" isn't an entirely accurate title: The set contains the talkies made by Roach from 1929-1938. There were plenty of silents before these 80 shorts (a trio are included on the bonus disc), and MGM limped on with the series after Roach left in '38. In any case, this is the good stuff, the Rascals everyone remembers.
Genuis Entertainment's set comes billed as "uncut," most likely a reference to some abrupt edits done in the 1970s to remove dated racial jokes about the black kids. While some of the stuff you'll see here truly is offensive, the commentators point out, the series did equal-opportunity goofing on all of the kids' physical characteristics and dialects.
Richard Lewis Ward, who wrote a book about Our Gang, notes that with "Our Gang" blacks did "much, much better than they fared in feature films of the time." He calls Roach's casts culturally "revolutionary," with white and black children playing together as equals, taking turns being clever and dumb. There is much evidence here for his viewpoint.
Jerry Tucker, one of several surviving "Our Gang" kids who participated in the extras, dismissed the racial issue as well. "This is just kids doing strange and funny things."
Dick Moore ("Dickie"), however, looks back with distaste on some of the crude racial gags of the Buckwheat era. He does say, "There was no meanness" in the shorts.
(Side note: Annie Ross, who had a brief gig with "Our Gang," gives an interesting rundown on her life in this section, an unexpected bonus for those interested in the jazz singer/horror actress. "We had a group called Lambert, Hendricks and Ross ...")
Other extras are the three silents (with commentaries), an overview docu, and a seven-minute piece on the race issue. The actors and experts appear in some video introductions that don't add much.
The short booklet offers a page on "The Curse of the Rascals," telling how an unusual number of the actors suffered early deaths.
The "Rascals" video and audio quality varies quite a bit, as you'd expect, but in general these shorts look surprisingly good due to a series restoration (that had been done previously). Most episodes are highly watchable. At worst, there is persistent flashing and some of the older audio tracks are scratchy. "Our Gang" fans are complaining about the presence of some 16 mm source material, indicated by Blackhawk titles, so if you care check that out issue.
Oh yeah, someone should take notice of the "Rascals" influence on rock. I count the Young Rascals, Spanky and Our Gang, Weezer, the International Submarine Band and perhaps the (U.K.) Rascals.
Other titles circling the DVD blog's players this week include the ultra high-res globe-spinner "Baraka," the British import "Fanny Hill" and the "10 Years of Rialto Pictures" salute from the Criterion Collection.
New and notable:
Abbott and Costello: Complete Universal Pictures Collection (Universal)
Animal House 30th Anniversary Edition (Universal)
Affairs of the Heart, Series One (Acorn Media)
Annie Leibovitz: Life Through a Lens (Warner)
Baraka (MPI Home Video)
Bloody Moon (Severin Films)
Carlos Mencia: Performanced Enhanced (Paramount)
Fanny Hill: Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure (Acorn)
The 4400: The Complete Series (Paramount)
Hank and Mike (Magnolia Home Entertainment)
Hell Ride (Dimension Extreme/Genius Products)
The Little Rascals: The Complete Collection (RHI/Genius Products)
Mystery Science Theater 3000: 20th Anniversary (Shout! Factory)
Sanford and Son: The Complete Series (Sony)
10 Years of Rialto Pictures (The Criterion Collection)
Complete list of recent DVD releases on my friend Harley's site, onvideo.org
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Posted by: tennen-parman | November 04, 2008 at 05:38 PM
Don't buy this set if your looking for Spanky {Wanky} and that crowd! These are the original Our Gang shorts. Filmed in and around the Hal Roach Studios in Culver City, Ca. makes for interesting location shooting. {And was it ever economical!!!}
Esp. if your from L.A. and acquainted with this area and can recognize certain areas, streets and buildings! You'd be surprised just how many! As for the DVDs themselves...well... some shorts are better quailty than others, but you expect that because this is from the 1920's!!!!
So, if you have a hankerin' to see L.A. back in its heyday and kids making their own toys to play with while invading the cops and parents too on some scratchy B&W film then this just might be for you! Roll em! :)
Posted by: noname | January 31, 2009 at 01:40 AM
I loved the little rascals. I grew up watching them on tv. They should re-release these classic vignettes in theaters instead of playing commercials. People pay a lot of money to be at the movies, the last thing they want to see is tv ads.
Posted by: new movies on dvd | August 02, 2009 at 09:38 AM