The Tin Man

1935
The Tin Man
5.9| 0h15m| en| More Info
Released: 30 March 1935 Released
Producted By: Hal Roach Studios
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Thelma and Patsy find themselves in a spooky house inhabited by a nut who is a mechanical genius and has made a robot who does everything. The inventor manipulates the robot's control board from a hidden room. The girls are soon in a panic. Patsy gets into an argument with the robot and loses the match of wits. Blackie Burke, an escaped convict, is using the house as a hideout, and this adds to the problems the girls already have.

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Director

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Hal Roach Studios

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Reviews

MartinHafer Patsy and Thelma have an escaped prisoner hiding in their car but don't know it. The arrive at the home of an insane man (Clarence Wilson) and he decides to scare them with his bizarro robot man. There really isn't a lot more to the plot than this.This is a terrible little short film...just terrible. While I have never been much of a fan of the Patsy Kelly/Thelma Todd shorts, this one is without a doubt the dopiest one I've ever seen. It's shrill, nonsensical and a bit embarrassing to watch. It appears as if there wasn't much in the way of script and the film gives neither Kelly nor Todd much to do but stand around and watch stupid things happen all around them. The ONLY thing I liked in the film was seeing the skeletal Clarence Wilson overact--and that really didn't account for much.
gridoon2018 Thelma Todd and Patsy Kelly really hit the jackpot this time, as they find themselves against an old dark house with secret panels and stuff, a (very) mad scientist, a malfunctioning robot, AND a dangerous escaped criminal! And all of this take place, you guessed it, in a dark and stormy night. For some reason, I found "The Tin Man" possibly the funniest of the Todd-Kelly shorts I've seen so far, especially when Kelly is making disgusted faces at having to drink a little "refreshment", and at the end when the robot (who IMDb reveals was played by an experienced stuntman) goes bat$#it-crazy and starts chasing everyone around. This is also one of their shortest shorts (at only 15 minutes), I think it should have run a little longer. **1/2 out of 4.
lzf0 This short is another in the endless variations of the "wandering into the house of a mad scientist" comedy set up. This time the innocent victims are Thelma Todd and Patsy Kelly in a Hal Roach production directed by Charley Chase's brother, James Parrott. There is nothing here that hasn't been done better by Laurel and Hardy, Abbott and Costello, and the Three Stooges. James Parrott keeps the action fast and furious, but the short is completely forgettable. Character actor Clarence Wilson plays the mad scientist; he is completely over the top and is neither funny nor scary. Wilson creates a robot that adds nothing to the comedy. Matthew Betz is thrown into the mix as an escaped convict to put some twists into this whole mess, but his presence leads to nothing. There is some typical slapstick, which is competently executed. It could have been helped by the inclusion of that famous LeRoy Shield background music which kept many Roach shorts moving. However, there is no music at all. What a shame!
wwwj34 This is the first Thelma Todd-Patsy Kelly short I've seen, and it appears that they were victims of a scheme to cast them as a female Laurel and Hardy. Not a good decision, since Patsy isn't convincing as a Stan-like nitwit, and when Thelma beats her up for her mistakes she seems sadistic and much less likable than Ollie (or Moe for that matter). The plot is a shapeless hash about a mad scientist creating a robot (played by a guy covered in construction paper). This short has one really beautiful scene. Wanting to distract the menacing robot or to somehow boggle its mind, Patsy has an idea: she'll perform an amazing trick with five spoons. First she lines them up end to end on a table, then indicates by elaborate gestures how she will tap the first spoon, and how it will strike the second spoon, and the second spoon will hit the third one and so on, ending with the last spoon flipping into a glass. Her pantomime & timing are superb, and it's a wonderfully unexpected tactic against a robot. Patsy executes the trick, with the result that the final spoon goes down the low-cut back of Thelma's dress. The whole sequence, which lasts maybe 12 seconds, is the one inspired sight gag in an otherwise ordinary film. I always enjoy seeing Clarence Wilson, but he isn't give much to do here. I'd be interested to see if there are perhaps better entries among the Thelma Todd-Patsy Kelly comedies.