Tiny Troubles Explained

Tiny Troubles
Director:George Sidney
Starring:George McFarland
Carl Switzer
Darla Hood
Eugene Lee
Billie Thomas
Jerry Maren
Edward Marazoni
Jimmy Marazoni
Barbara Bedford
Fred Kelsey
Cinematography:Alfred Gilks
Distributor:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Country:United States
Language:English

Tiny Troubles is a 1939 Our Gang short comedy film directed by George Sidney. It was the 176th Our Gang short to be released.[1]

Plot

Alfalfa has a loud crying baby brother that he wants to get rid of. When out with the gang he sees what he thinks is a baby in a carriage. He puts his baby brother in that carriage and takes this "baby" back home. But the baby happens to be a midget who lives a life of crime named "Lightfingered Lester". Lester initially plays along but causes all sorts of havoc soon after including drinking beer, taunting the gang, and attempting to rob the house. Someone else finds the baby and brings him to the police station. The police then raid Alfalfa's home and take the gang in when they find Lester there. They are all taken in. They send Lester back to jail while giving the gang probation.

Cast

The Gang

Additional cast

Critical reception

In the book The Little Rascals: The Life and Times of Our Gang, film critic Leonard Maltin commented that Tiny Troubles is a "shapeless reworking" of 1929's Bouncing Babies consisting of "woefully thin stuff". He added that the film "represents the first really bad MGM Our Gang short" and that "somehow the [MGM] production staff expected an audience to swallow the idea that 11-year-old Alfalfa and 10-year-old Spanky couldn't tell the difference between an infant and a midget dressed as one." Maltin concluded by saying "embarrassment replaces laughter."[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Maltin . Leonard . Bann . Richard W. . Our Gang: The Life and Times of the Little Rascals . 1977 . Crown Publishers . 226–227 . 978-0-517-52675-0 . 3 March 2024.
  2. [Leonard Maltin|Maltin, Leonard]