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10 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Sort of like One Million B.C. sit coms., 29 June 2006
Author: max von meyerling from New York

This is some new kind of insanity. They say the story of making some pictures is more interesting than the pictures themselves but how this film ever got packaged like this must be the best story to come out of the post MGM Hal Roach Studio. Now you will find this film listed as 43 minutes and to be sure NIAGARA FALLS (1941) clocks in at 43 minutes and 7 seconds as seen in a copy shown on CUNY TV in New York. When Turner Classics announced a screening of NIAGARA FALLS they put it in a 90 minute slot. I thought that possibly they were planning on filling the time with some of the Zasu Pitts/Thelma Todd two reelers that they'd been showing recently.

I already had a copy of NIAGARA FALLS but out of curiosity I fired up the old VCR and was surprised that when after the credits a whole different picture came on. I did some research and found out that what had happened was that MISS POLLY (1941), also starring Zasu Pitts and Slim Summerville, had been shoehorned in. The MISS POLLY portion of the picture is exactly 43 minutes long and the NIAGARA FALLS section lacks only 20 sec. including the titles for a total of 1:25:40. Apparently Hal Roach made these weird running time films he called "streamliners", longer than the longest "shorts" at 20-25 min. but not quite up to the industry standards for a minimum running time for a feature.

They weren't on the same bill, with NIAGARA FALLS released on Oct. 17 1941 and MISS POLLY on Nov. 14. Just when and how and why these films were joined together must be a story. They were both reissued in 1948 by Favorite Films and marketed on DVD by Alpha Video in 2006. There are many DVD's which combine several old B's and programmers but as separate entities so the suspicion is that Favorite did it to market the re-issue as a legitimate feature. They accomplished this very simply. Keeping the original opening and closing titles from NIAGARA FALLS (making everyone who made or appeared in MISS POLLY uncredited) they simply ran MISS POLLY and at the end, (minus the end credits, the missing 20 sec.?) they suddenly fade and resolve to the beginning of NIAGARA FALLS which, curiously enough, is a set up for a flash back, giving this version of NIAGARA FALLS one of the weirdest structures of any film extant. While MISS POLLY ends with Slim Summerville, who is Zasu Pitts handyman, the object of dosed leers from the town prude, NIAGARA FALLS begins with Summerville and Pitts newly married and on the road to Niagara Falls. This "mystery" is something of a tempest in a teapot as both pictures are rehashed bits from the dawn of cinema as Hal Roach never tossed away a gag. For example here's the two people sharing a bathroom who don't know about the other gag.

So this is recommended only for completests, obsessing supporting player fanatics, fans of Slim Summerville and/or Zasu Pitts or the merely curious. Sort of like One Million B.C. sit coms.

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6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
And Down they Go!, 13 March 2005
5/10
Author: boblipton from New York City

This weak little effort doesn't begin to use a fraction of the ability of its two leads, Slim Summerville and Zasu Pitts, in no small part because too much of the story concerns the two good-looking but uninteresting juveniles. The picture is one of Roach's one-hour 'streamliners' that he was concentrating on in this period; it took World War Two and contract work to stabilize the studio.

However, the little time they do get together -- in this honeymoon hotel movie -- is time well spent. The two were in ten movies together -- if you don't count ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT, where they reshot all of Miss Pitts' scenes with another actress -- and they certainly worked together well. This was their last movie together. A pity they couldn't end on a higher note.

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1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Very silly but sweet, 24 September 2011
7/10
Author: csteidler from Minnesota

Sweethearts Sam (Slim Summerville) and Emmy (Zasu Pitts) have waited twenty years to get married but are finally on their way to a Niagara Falls hotel. Nearly there, they encounter a young couple having car trouble at the side of the road. Sam and Emmy assume the couple are newlyweds like themselves; in fact, Margy (Marjorie Woodworth) and Tom (Tom Brown) are anything but—they're strangers having trouble with two separate cars, and Margy is helping herself to Tom's tools while he fiddles under his own hood. There lies the setup: and the rest of the film consists of Sam attempting to "reconcile" Tom and Margy; Emmy waiting for Sam to pay attention to her back in the bridal suite; and Margy and Tom trading insults, attempting to escape Sam's watchful eye, and eventually….Well, I don't want to spoil it for you.

This is a very silly film, which is completely okay because it makes absolutely no pretensions to being anything else.

The two young leads are attractive and pleasant—nothing exceptional, but they're interesting enough to root for. We don't get enough of Zasu Pitts—though she does have a good scene cuddling with a man's jacket, pretending it's Sam.

Summerville as Sam is persistently and vigorously goofy, to the point where he really looks natural enough climbing along a window ledge in his pajamas carrying a large revolver. The scene where he re-enters from the window ledge into a strange couple's room and hides in their bed is hilarious—what makes it funniest is that he plays it exactly as if this ridiculous situation is perfectly normal.

This 43-minute "streamliner" has to be just about what Hal Roach had in mind when he started producing these quickies.

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1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
The comedy of vacations, 6 November 2009
7/10
Author: Cristi_Ciopron from CGSM, Soseaua Nationala 49

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

A sex comedy about two couples, an oldie one and a younger one, with the nicely piquant Marjorie Woodworth, Zasu Pitts, Brown and Summerville, one—liners and wisecracks, in a pagan atmosphere of love and attraction, NIAGARA FALLS is one of the funniest screwballs ever about the unusual ways in which people come to love each other.

ZaSu, the professional mistreated dame, plays a frustrated bride whose husband ruins her honeymoon.

Some people here on IMDb are harsh on this movie. You treat it kindly. The women are interesting, and the slapstick is good. None pretended that this is Chaplin.

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Slim Summerville Plays Cupid, 16 January 2012
4/10
Author: wes-connors from Earth

At Niagara Falls, oil tycoon Slim Summerville (as Sam Sawyer) attempts suicide but is stopped by peanut vendor Tommy Mack. We flashback to view his story… Though older than most newlyweds, Mr. Summerville and bride Zasu Pitts (as Emmy) are on their way to a hotel. They meet younger couple Marjorie Woodworth (as Margy Blake) and Tom Brown (as Tom Wilson) on the road, with car trouble. At the "Falls View Hotel", Ms. Pitts wants to have sex with her groom, but Summerville becomes involved with Ms. Woodworth and Mr. Brown. Summerville thinks the other couple is bickering, and endeavors to reunite them. But Woodworth and Brown are not even married. It's all silly, but short.

**** Niagara Falls (10/17/41) Gordon Douglas ~ Slim Summerville, Marjorie Woodworth, Tom Brown, Zasu Pitts

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4 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Too Stupid To Bother With, 21 June 2007
4/10
Author: (reader4)

Being a fan of ZaSu Pitts comedies, I thought this one looked like it was worth a try. I was quite disappointed.

(The version I saw was on TCM, but consisted only of the Niagara Falls movie; the Miss Polly movie was absent.) The talents of the actors, who give fine performances, is wasted on one of the stupidest stories I have ever had the misfortune of sitting through.

Tom Brown (Tom Wilson) surprised me by being the strongest actor in the show, but the spotlight is hogged by Slim Summerville (Sam Sawyer), who, if he has any talent, didn't demonstrate it here.

ZaSu Pitts (Elly Sawyer) is great, but doesn't have near big enough a part. The biggest laugh in the movie is when she ends up under Sam under a table.

The only one in the movie who has any sense at all is Tom Wilson. Margie (Marjorie Woodworth) is unreasonable in general. While she is physically quite attractive, her personality and attitudes make her completely undesirable. Elly, Sam, and the hotel desk clerk are just complete fools.

Sam and Elly give up their honeymoon suite in the crowded hotel for Tom and Margie. But then they take it back. Sam ends up imprisoning Tom and Margie in their room. Most of the movie is them trying to break out, but Sam, using a rifle, always puts them back again.

Towards the end comes the worst part. Tom, who is finally about to make good his escape, runs into a minister on a lower floor of the hotel. Now the guy, who, as I said, is the only one in the whole movie who has a head on his shoulders, suddenly, for absolutely no reason at all, decides he has to marry Margie!

He drags the minister up to the room he has just escaped from, but Margie doesn't want to marry him. He gives her a kiss, and now, after one kiss, she feels compelled to marry him.

Finally, Sam has the nerve to say to Tom, "You deceived me," when practically the only line Tom had to Sam earlier was, "We're not married," to which Sam replied, "You think I'd believe that?"

Idiotic.

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0 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
They should send this one over in a barrel!, 15 October 2010
1/10
Author: mark.waltz from New York City

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

Basically, this is a longer version of a two-reel Hal Roach short that picks up where the much funnier "Miss Polly" leaves off. (The two films have been re-edited together as one for TV Broadcast under the title "Miss Polly"; only the first half of that is amusing. Try to catch the first half in its initial edit, and forget about this one.) After turning their hometown upside down in the first film (or half, depending on whatever version you see), Zasu Pitts and Slim Summerville are married and head to Niagra Falls where they encounter Joan Woodbury and Tom Brown whom they think are newlyweds having a marital spat. Summerville goes off his rocker trying to get the (non) couple back together and is unable to listen to them in finding out the truth that Brown stopped to help Woodbury on the road and ended up squabbling with them on their way to the hotel. Obnoxious Summerville tries to play "Shot Gun Honeymoon" on them while Pitts, in her own inimitable way, frets over her lack of a honeymoon. The hotel finds out that an unmarried couple has registered, and that's where the film basically lags to an uneventful conclusion. The whole film is pointless and would avoid being reviewed or rated had it been an actual short than coming in at a "featurette" length of 47 minutes.

Even in the worst of his two reel comedies, Hal Roach did better work. Too bad they didn't finally get Pitts and Summerville back together at the end in a scene where Pitts sighs her usual "Oh, dear" right after Summerville turns out the light. But definitely catch "Miss Polly" which is definitely filled with the Hal Roach left off.

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0 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
See THE ORIGINAL version of this film--it's a riot!, 26 April 2008
9/10
Author: planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida

I was very surprised when I read a few of the reviews for this film, as apparently some time after NIAGARA FALLS was made, someone stupidly combined this film with MISS POLLY. While both are short Hal Roach films and star many of the same actors, combining them is like combining PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE with STAR WARS! Sure, they're both sci-fi films, but other than that there is a huge gap in quality of the two pictures. Bluntly put, NIAGARA FALLS is a cute comedy whereas MISS POLLY is a pile of crap--merging them together must have resulted in a very confusing film indeed! I saw NIAGARA FALLS on Turner Classic Movies and it was shown in its original form--thank goodness. Now I am sure that many will think my score of 9 is way out of line, but I am NOT comparing this film to every other movie--just other short films (such as Roach's "Streamliners") and B-movies. I've actually seen quite a few of these post-Laurel and Hardy films by Roach Studios and this is bar far the funniest and best made of the bunch (and they do vary wildly in quality).

What makes this film so good is the quality of the writing. While MISS POLLY totally missed the mark, here with NIAGARA FALLS everything fell perfectly into place. One way I know it was such a good film is that my teenage daughter who is NOT a lover of old films like me still loved the film. Another way I know how good it was is that we both laughed repeatedly at the film. Sure, sometimes the humor wasn't 100% sophisticated, but it was funny--very, very funny. I particularly loved how outlandish the film became--such as the scenes with the gun and the very end of the film.

As far as the acting goes, it was fine but I don't know why Slim and Zasu got secondary billing--they (particularly Slim Summerville) were great. Zasu was not annoying (something she frequently was in other films) and Slim was like a walking cartoon character.

So if you'd like a good laugh and don't mind that the film is occasionally very silly, watch this movie.

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4 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
No, You're Not Hallucinating, 30 June 2006
3/10
Author: David (Handlinghandel) from NY, NY

This appears to be two movies spliced into one. In the first, ZaSu Pitts is a renegade in a small town. She wants to help the romantic life of Marjorie Woodworth. OK: I'd never heard of her before either. But she and Pitts are in both parts of this concoction.

Before we know it, Pitts is no longer Miss {Polly. She is Emmie. I had to rewind to see if I'd fallen asleep somewhere. I hadn't. She no longer in a small town but on her way to the title Honeymoon destination.

The movie has some cute moments. The first part is better, with roles for what seems to be every third-rate character actress working in Hollywood at the time.

And what of Ms. Woolworth? She sounds a little like Betty Hutton. She sounds a little like Marie Wilson. She's pretty, certainly. But she's no comedienne.

Pitts often was used in very small roles. Here she has the largest role. She's always fun, though this movie made me wonder if a little of her doesn't go quite a long way. (As a comic. When she was a tragic actress in Von Stroheim silents -- "The Wedding March" and Greed" are the two I have seen -- she was brilliant.)

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