Luncheon at Twelve (1933) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Skip luncheon for it!
hte-trasme1 October 2009
This is another good, solid entry from that master of the two-reel comedy short, Charley Chase. This one isn't the number-on best constructed comedy in the series, but it is pure good-mood-generating fun from start to finish, and that's good enough for me! It starts with some very funny scenes involving Charley trying fool a principled English ash-collector into taking his ashes late, then stumbling into a job as an "interior decorator" and overdressing for the paint-intensive work. It's classic Chase comedy of errors and embarrassment.

Billy Gilbert gets a larger role here and he makes a good impression as his German "Mr Schmaltz" persona. Gilbert was a perfect supporting player to enhance a short, but was always too hammy to have much success starring in one. He's got a fake Oliver Hardy-style moustache on here, and in the second reel he and Charley get to engage in the sort of deliberate, measured slapstick that Laurel and Hardy specialized in around the business of painting a table, and it works very well. Charley also doesn't resist throwing in his very good Billy Gilbert impression! Charley Chase's comedies -- the sound ones especially -- were always very musical, and "Luncheon at Twelve" is a good example, with the clever business of Charley's distracted painting matching the rhythm of the music from the other room. He also sings a very fun blackface-style song (supplied with white-lips makeup by a mishap with the paint), which provides the enjoyable if abrupt ending. This is a good one, lacking none of the infectious fun that the Charley Chase talkies are so memorable for.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
If It's Dinner At Eight....
boblipton19 July 2019
Betty Mack gets Charley a job with her father, Billy Gilbert (mit ein Cherman Accent). Charley thinks it's as an interior decorator. Actually it's as a painter. It seems that Gale Henry is just back from ... well, someplace else, and she wants the kitchen table painted white, while she entertains her snooty guests outside.

So Charley, Billy, and Billy Franey are in the kitchen painting the table white. Except they keep getting paint on each other, resulting in Charley winding up in Whiteface.

There's a nice number of variations on how the three inept painters get paint on each other, and how Charley comes to eat a paintbrush, all leading into Charley singing a hot number. It's not one of Charley's best short comedies, but it's got a lot of well-run gags.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Got Milk?
cricket302 December 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This 21-minute short begins as a slapstick farce, and degenerates into a musical variety show, at about the point when newbie painter Charley Chase is brushed by his coworkers with "White Face," and starts wailing in a Jolson-like voice to echo THE JAZZ SINGER. It is never explained WHY a high society lady would summon a Three Stooges-like crew to whitewash her dining table while her luncheon party is in progress. However, since all the palm trees in the background indicate this story is set in Hollywood, where citizens are dumber than cacti, I suppose anything goes. Charley Chase wears glasses here, apparently hoping to evoke Harold Lloyd's wimpy-looking "Glasses" character, which was all the rage a decade earlier. Unfortunately for the viewer, Chase lacks Lloyd's charisma, daring-do, and smarts, if LUNCHEON AT TWELVE is a representative sample of his work.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Decent Chase Comedy
Michael_Elliott7 December 2013
Luncheon at Twelve (1933)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Decent two-reeler finds an unemployed Charlie Chase getting a job with the father (Billy Gilbert) of a girl (Betty Mack) that he's fallen for. At first Chase thinks he's gotten a job at an interior decorator but it turns out he's just a painter and not a very good one. LUNCHEON AT TWELVE is one of the many shorts that Chase made with Hal Roach at MGM. While this film certainly isn't a classic, it at least has enough laughs to make it worth sitting through if you're a fan of the underrated star. I think the first half of the picture is the best as it mainly deals with Chase trying to get the ash collector to take his bucket of ashes. This leads to Chase trying to dump his bucket on various other lawns hoping that the collector will take it and this here gets the majority of the jokes. The second half of the picture isn't nearly as good as we get into some rather routine comedy bits. The most annoying is a rich woman trying to get everyone to be quiet so that a violinist can play his music. The "comedy" from the painting comes from Chase simply not being very good at it and not paying attention to what he's painting. Again, this here is far from a classic but fans of Chase should find enough humor to make it worth viewing.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed