Benny, from Panama (1934) Poster

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6/10
The Mosquito from Panama
krorie2 December 2006
What a time Eddie Foy, Jr., and Jeanette Loff have trying to consummate their marriage. First, Jeanette's wedding dress catches fire as the happy couple traipse down the church steps; then Spanky from the Our Gang comedies hurls a muddy shoe that hits the lucky groom right in the kisser, followed by a frantic Key Stone Cops type chase down the streets of Hollywood; then to top it all uninvited guests--a multitude--drop in on the newlyweds. When the room finally clears and Eddie and Jeanette get ready to have a real wedding night, Benny from Panama, Eddie's old war buddy, arrives with a crew of sailors and an extremely animated and agitated mosquito.

Fans of old-time slapstick, Hal Roach style, are in for a treat. The last scene with a room full of assorted characters including the bride and groom attempting to swat the pesky insect is hilarious and shows the audience where the term "slap stick" originated.
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7/10
Benny, from Panama has an amusing appearance from Spanky and some other hilarious happenings
tavm14 November 2014
Besides the Our Gang films, Spanky also appeared in several features and shorts for other studios or Hal Roach himself during his time in the gang. This was one of Hal Roach's other shorts that's not part of the Our Gang series Spanky appeared in. He wears a sailor suit and throws a muddy boot to the newlyweds as they leave for their destination at the beginning of the short. He later then appears as one of several of the wedding guests that come uninvited to their hotel room. The rest of the short has the married couple getting interrupted by the title character who arrives with his fellow sailors and a mosquito (probably animated by Roach staffer Roy Seawright). Also, fellow hotel guest Arthur Housman-playing his usual drunk-also comes in after being bothered by the commotion from downstairs. I think I've said enough so on that note, I recommend Benny, from Panama.
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5/10
Middling comedy from Hal Roach, with elements of Laurel and Hardy
audiemurph16 July 2012
This 2-reeler from the legendary Hal Roach Studios is, honestly, not that great. But it is great fun to seek out those elements in the film that can be thought of as belonging to the modus operandi of Roach films in general, and Laurel and Hardy films in specific (L&H of course made all their classics at Hal Roach).

For example, every sound film Laurel and Hardy made at Roach has, as its soundtrack, selections from a small group of humorous, tinny sounding melodies played by a small brass and string ensemble. The exact same tunes show up in every single L&H movie. Here, the opening credit music and closing music are the same tune, taken from this very collection.

The most notable character in "Benny, from Panama", is the great Arthur Housman, playing the drunk husband who lives on the floor below that upon which most of the action takes place. Housman spent his entire career playing drunks, for me most memorably in the classic L&H short "The Fixer-Uppers".

Other recognizable elements include (1) an enormous Oliver Hardy-sized fall into a bathtub; (2) bizarre physical deformation humor (a literally throbbing big toe that expands and shrinks like a balloon); (3) people walking into walls randomly, and so on, pretty much with the exact pacing and sounds and facial reactions that you would find in any Laurel and Hardy movie.

Of course, this is not accidental. This short was directed by James Parrott, who directed a huge number of L&H shorts, silent and sound, and so it is not surprising that there are so many similarities. Yet these elements are fun to look for. Otherwise, other than a few slapstick gags, "Benny from Panama" is not particularly funny, and the experimental use of a cartoon mosquito to pester and dive-bomb the large crowds of people inside the main room is, though interesting, not really effective effective.
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6/10
Early animation within film
rokitlady11 December 2006
In the last few scenes of Benny from Panama, when his old sailor buddy shows up at the hotel room, he brings along a pesky mosquito. This mosquito character is surely a groundbreaking attempt at integrating cartoon animation into film with live actors. Also, the mosquito from Panama attacks and bites the sailor's toe while he's sleeping on the couch. The close-up camera shot of his toe, enhanced by animated throbbing, was very cute and novel for the day. There are about 8-10 close-ups of the mosquito, which are cartoon-like and have varying scale, but the use of the characterization of an annoyed and irritated mosquito is something all viewers can relate to and makes the scene in the hotel room very funny.
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10/10
Fun Wedding Night Comedy
HarleanHayworth12 June 2014
I really enjoyed this Hal Roach short - there are lots of laughs and the actors are great. The story starts out with a newlywed couple (Jeanette Loff and Eddie Foy Jr.)leaving the church. All they want is a happy wedding night but they keep getting into trouble. First her dress catches on fire, then they get a speeding ticket, and when they finally get back to their apartment Benny comes to visit with all his sailor friends. The highlight of this film is definitely Jeanette singing "Now That We're Alone". She was a beautiful and talented actress who died tragically young. You can watch Benny From Panama on TCM and on You Tube so try to watch it.
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8/10
Worth coming from Panama
hte-trasme10 February 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This short comedy from the Hal Roach "All Stars" series stars Jeanette Loff and Eddie Foy Jr, and speculation has it that Roach was considering solidifying the pair as a comedy team, and based on the strength of this, I wouldn't have minded seeing more at all. It's an extremely funny, joyful short, and, in the spirit of the films of many of Roach's bigger stars (from which, incidentally, Our Gang's Spanky makes a nice little cameo), is a great example of a comedy of of frustration and escalation.

Jeanette and Eddie have just been married -- and everybody knows what they ought to be up to on their wedding night, but when they're continually interrupted by ever more absurd problems it makes for a very relatable but still humorously unlikely comedy. There's a lot of great comic creativity to the interruptions too, with the titular Benny arriving from Panama trailing a gaggle of hungry singing sailors, unearthly mosquitoes (represented in some cute animation that doesn't take us out of the reality of it), a flooding bathroom leaking to the other hotel guests, and more.

Eddie Foy isn't personally too memorable here, but he plays the comedy well and has a charming screen presence. Jeanette Loff is a great leading lady, and she's especially wonderful in her subtle, sultry rendition of a song about how she and Eddie can finally be alone -- that's what makes it doubly hilarious in my favorite gag here when this cuts away to a shot where the apartment is suddenly filled with noisy guests.

A great laugh-getting comedy from the Roach Studios, showing the big comic value in adding creative and surprising material to a foolproof formula for comedy.
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Not Enough Laughs to Work
Michael_Elliott7 August 2011
Benny from Panama (1934)

** (out of 4)

This short is part of the "Hal Roach's All-Stars" series and features Jeanette Loff and Eddie Foy, Jr., who play newlyweds that fall into one disaster after another. Just as they get settled into their hotel their friends show up to party until the middle of the night and then things get worse when Benny (James P. Burtis), an old friend of Eddie's shows up for some more partying. This was the first film from the series that I've seen and I must say that I hope the others are much better. This certainly isn't an awful short but there's still not enough laughs to carry its 20-minute running time. I think the best portion of the film happens at the start when the two are married and right off the bat her dress catches fire and she has to strip in the back of the car only to then get pulled over by the police. These sequences are things we've seen in countless earlier Roach films but they're given some new life here and the viewer gets a couple laughs. I think the weakest portion of the final are the final ten-minutes or so once the "friends" come over and destroy everything. The stuff with the party guests simply aren't funny and things don't get any better once Benny shows up. What's even worse is an animated sequence involving a Panama mosquito but the laughs still don't come. Both Foy and Loff are in fine form but one wishes they had more to work with. Spanky from the Our Gang shorts has a quick cameo.
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