Big Ears | |
Director: | Robert F. McGowan |
Producer: | Robert F. McGowan Hal Roach |
Music: | Leroy Shield Marvin Hatley |
Cinematography: | Art Lloyd |
Editing: | Richard C. Currier |
Distributor: | MGM |
Runtime: | 20' 47" |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Big Ears is a 1931 Our Gang short comedy film directed by Robert F. McGowan.[1] It was the 108th Our Gang short to be released.[2]
Wheezer's mother and father continue to fight in an unconvincing and thoroughly hammy fashion over many different silly things, such as the coffee being too cold or the toast being burned. Wheezer overhears his father telling his mother that he is getting her a divorce. Not knowing what a divorce is, Wheezer tells Stymie, Dorothy, and Sherwood. They speculate on what a divorce means, at one point deciding it might be something good. Then Donald tells the gang what a divorce is, and people start sobbing. He even tells Wheezer that he will have no father anymore. His mother might either remarry and give him a stepfather and states that his step father beats him regularly. He also says that maybe his mother will throw him into an orphanage and not want him anymore.
Wheezer is frightened so he concocts a plot to make himself abominably sick so that his parents will come together out of concern from him. Wheezer visits a bathroom and his friends pour all the medicine in the medicine cabinet down his throat to make him ill, along with amounts of lard. He indeed gets sick and his plan presumably works. His parents kiss and make up and promise to never fight again and that they love Wheezer very much.