Lambchops (1929) Poster

(1929)

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7/10
Gracie warns George: "I have brains I haven't even used yet!"
wmorrow5917 August 2008
This amusing Vitaphone short captures George Burns & Gracie Allen in the full bloom of their stage success in vaudeville. The duo made their screen debut in 'Lambchops,' but based on their calm self-assurance before the camera you'd never guess it was their first film. In 1929 they were still young, the act was fresh and the jokes were new—well, fairly new, anyway. The highlight of the routine as performed here is a charming song and dance punctuated with punch-lines, effortlessly executed, or so it appears. George & Gracie are sweet and funny throughout, and their comic rapport is a joy to behold.

One of the trademarks of the Burns & Allen TV show of the '50s was George's special relationship with the viewer, i.e. the way he could step out of the action, turn to the camera and address us. It's interesting to find that even here in his screen debut, Burns is aware of the audience, and is already breaking through the fourth wall. The setting for the sketch is a drawing room decorated in high Art Deco style, and the short begins as George and Gracie enter without fanfare and begin to look under chairs and tables, seemingly for some missing item. They're looking for the audience! It's George who first "sees" us, and calls his discovery to Gracie's attention. Once the audience has been acknowledged the team launch into their act, a series of jokes, puns, and similar verbal acrobatics on a wide array of unrelated topics: family, cars, boats, crossword puzzles, and what to do when you jump from a plane and your parachute doesn't open. Gracie drives the routine with her characteristic dizzy dame act—though her genuine intelligence shines through, as it also would for Judy Holliday—while George acts as the calm, sane master of ceremonies, perennially irritated yet strangely drawn to this crazy woman. When they first teamed up, George planned to be the comedian while Gracie was merely supposed to feed him straight lines, but they soon found that her delivery was getting all the laughs. At one point in 'Lambchops' the duo seem to be making an ironic reference to this, when George attempts to tell a few jokes and Gracie keeps stepping on his laughs by jumping ahead to the punch-lines.

Most of the jokes are pretty corny, but the duo punch 'em across anyhow, and then wrap up the act with "Do You Believe Me," a cute song they later recorded. Gracie's dancing is graceful, and her singing voice is thin but quite nice; George sounds just like the George Burns we recall from TV talk shows, decades later. When the song is over we expect a quick fade-out, but the team remain on stage with the camera still rolling and no finale prepared, or so they pretend. Once more it's Mr. Burns who first becomes aware of the situation. He calls "us" (i.e. those unseen viewers) to his partner's attention, and eventually manages to ease their way off stage with one more gag. This final bit reveals that comic shtick involving a performer seemingly lacking material and nervously aware of being watched, i.e. the Actor's Nightmare routine, has been around longer than we might think. In any case, 'Lambchops' is a must for fans of Burns & Allen, vaudeville, Vitaphone shorts, and anyone who enjoys seeing a solid comedy routine smoothly handled by a pair of pros.
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8/10
A cute little Vitaphone short
robcat20751 December 2007
A cute little short, Gracie shines, George doesn't quite have the straight man perfected but he'll get there.

I wonder how they did this act in vaudeville with no microphones or amplification.

The most disorienting element is seeing them both so young, 10 years before their radio stardom and 20-30 before their TV show.

Someone should have told George to tilt his fedora away from the camera so we could see his face better.

I'm impressed with the sound. 1929 is still the stone age for movie sound but audio superiority of Vitaphone's sound on disc system really shows here.
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7/10
Burns and Allen make their film debut in the amusing Lambchops
tavm24 June 2008
This being the film debut of the comedy team of George Burns and Gracie Allen, it's fascinating to watch a vaudeville act that had been formed just a few years earlier provide their pretty amusing banter that they use here to fill seven minutes. Among the many amusements from them: George-"What man in the army has the biggest hat?" Gracie-"The one with the biggest head." or George-"What sings with four legs?" Gracie-"Two canaries." George, tired of having Gracie steal his punchlines then asks and answers, "What gives more milk than a cow? Two cows!" They also go into a song and dance routine with more amusing patter before they realize they have a few more time to fill. If you're familiar with Burns and Allen, you can probably guess what happens. So on that note, I recommend Lambchops for anyone interested in these vintage shorts.
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7/10
A Nice Debut
gavin69428 April 2016
George and Gracie enter an elegant drawing room, looking everywhere for something. Turns out, they're looking for the audience, and when George spots the camera, they start in on their patter.

Comedian Fred Allen was slated to film one of his comedy routines but had come down with the flu, leaving the studio in the lurch. Burns was told that the job paid $1,700, so he said yes on the spot. "I'd never heard of $1,700 in my life, especially for nine minutes' work," Burns quipped.

Now, this may not be the funniest thing you ever heard, but it makes for a nice debut for Gracie Allen and George Burns. Gracie may be semi-forgotten today, but Burns remains a comedy legend, and seeing him this early in his career is a treat.
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Welcome Burns and Allen
Michael_Elliott27 February 2008
Lambchops (1929)

*** (out of 4)

George Burns and Gracie Allen had one of the greatest relationship in Hollywood history. Their comic timing would take them into radio, television, movies and just about any other thing you can think of. Their first shot at the movies came in this 8 minute sound short, which shows the two doing one of the acts that they did on vaudeville. If you're unfamiliar with these early talking shorts, they were basically just filmed in a building with a cameraman, a director, the stars and someone able to record sound. They were mostly filmed in one take so we really get a great idea of what it would have been like seeing Burns and Allen on a stage.

The act here is pretty funny for the most part and especially a "joke" that Allen tells yet she's not bright enough to realize that it doesn't make a bit of sense. The two also get to perform a nice song and dance and the short ends with a pretty funny walk off. Fans of the two will certainly enjoy seeing this.
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7/10
Where is the Audience?
DKosty1237 December 2016
Vitaphone produced this first film of Vaudville team George Burns and Gracie Allen even before the stock market crash. It is a short subject, about the length of a one reel-er at just over 10 minutes.

Some things to note, Gracie has dark black hair here. She is just getting started at doing the punchlines for all the jokes. Her timing is coming along, and George's is still coming along too. George had a harder job, learning to be a straight man after being a comedian. Up until the 1960's when Gracie died, he would get better and better at it.

This debut does not have the quality of jokes the team would have later, but there are enough good ones to make it worth watching. Gracie even warns George about what was to come. It is a fitting item for a team that delivered many laughs for over 30 years after this start.
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7/10
Corny fun, over in just eight minutes!
mark.waltz7 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The camera never really moves in this one reel short that introduced George Burns and Gracie Allen to the silver screen Warner Brothers before they went over to Paramount and then later to radio. Gracie spends five minutes stealing the punch lines from George jokes, and nobody could do that better and funnier than her. It's obvious that a lot of the gags from "I Love Lucy" more than two decades later came from what they did because you'll recognize the style of gags from Desi and Lucy's act curious George and Gracie. A lot of what what Gracie says actually makes her sound like the smartest dumb woman (or the dumbest smart woman) to ever step foot on the screen or radio or stage, and she is an absolute delight. I particularly like her response to who in the Army where's the largest hat. Jokes only work when the delivery is superb, and Gracie has excellent delivery which allowed George to go on to be the most popular straight man for decades. indeed, it does take a great deal of talent to be able to do that and sustain what the funny man (or in this case funny lady) is doing. It all ends with a little cute dance number, something that I never got to do in their Paramount shorts.
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9/10
Charming.
planktonrules23 January 2010
An early Vitaphone film, this Warner Brothers short apparently was one created using a very complicated system through which an accompanying record was synchronized with a movie camera. There were several serious setbacks for such a system (such as if a film skipped--it became out of sync for the rest of the film plus the records quickly wore out--and 20 showings was the normal life-span of the records) and even though it produced excellent sound, it was eventually replaced. The last of the Vitaphone films were made in 1930, then the studio switched to the standard sound-on-film system.

This is Burns & Allen's first screen performance. Because it's so early, the team's style is different from what you might have come to expect. George is more of a shyster than he'd play later--with jokes about him stealing his brother-in-law's stuff. As for Gracie, she's ditsy, but less so than in later films. Their banter is also a bit different because it's a bit faster paced--like they later deliberately slowed it down for the audiences.

In addition to their comedy, you can see the team's vaudeville roots as they sing and dance a nice little number together. While neither George nor Gracie would have ever been accused of having great voices, the song works because it's within their range and was quite sweet.

Overall, a charming little short--one of the better shorts of the early sound era.
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6/10
Not every film debut is earth shattering; some are forgettable . . .
tadpole-596-91825621 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
. . . such as when Clint Eastwood played the white-smocked rodent wrangler Jennings in REVENGE OF THE CREATURE (1955). Anyone who tells you that as soon as they clapped their eyes on "Jennings," they knew that this actor would become Nameless in A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS, Dirty Harry in too many to mention, and the Terror of Highland Park in GRAN TORINO is lying! Similarly, any plaudits given to this Warner Brothers\Vitaphone short #891 LAMBCHOPS (1929) are clearly being award with the benefit of HINDSIGHT, since this is not even among the two or three most humorous shorts included among the two dozen in THE JAZZ SINGER set, and was tacked on solely for its name recognition. Nothing in its 8 minute, 1.04-second running time can come close to producing the level of side-splitting laughter Madeline Foy (of Seven Little Foys fame) induces in about 15 seconds with her retelling of Little Red Riding Hood's sad story. For sustained humor, the Beau Brummels are light years ahead of LAMBCHOPS, but due to Hollywood crony-ism and good genes for longevity, Burns & Allen are in the National Film Registry for LAMBCHOPS, while only my immediate family and maybe half a dozen other people are around to sing the praises of Albert Schultzman & Samuel Levy (the real names of the two guys making up the Beau Brummels).
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8/10
EARLY burns & allen
ksf-29 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Looks like the very first TV bit (or at least the first filmed bit) they did together, even BEFORE their radio show, according to the historians on Turner Classics. Now shown frequently on TCM... this one is up to 300 votes as of today! (I have their three-movie set on DVD... all three are Great.) We open with George and Gracie doing their vaudeville bit, and they ram right through it, at 100 miles per hour. Unfortunately, the sound quality is pretty terrible, (of course, since this is nearly 100 years old, we're lucky to still have this around in any form!) so you really have to pay attention. and they don't pause for laughter, since its one of the early talkies. The picture quality is actually very good. They are still heavy on the makeup, since the medium was still pretty new. They take a break and sing "Do ya Believe Me?" by Benny Davis. a quick two-step back and forth a couple times, and its all over before you know it. Fun! and a little bit of history. TOTALLY a must see for vaudeville buffs, or fans of Burns & Allen. Fun bit. Short and sweet!
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9/10
One of the best of the Vitaphone shorts...
AlsExGal12 November 2022
... which were recorded between 1926 and 1930 using the sound on disc VItaphone system by Warner Brothers. It is a good record of the basic framework of George and Gracie's act for decades. In fact, George and Gracie performed this exact skit on their TV show in the 1950s and it was still funny.

George and Gracie basically reproduce the act that had made them successful in vaudeville, which is George playing straight man to Gracie's dizzy statements. But then every now and then she outsmarts him, such as when he tells a series of jokes and she steals the punchlines. Burns always said he was a failure as a vaudevillian until he got Gracie as a partner and then everything began to fall into place.

George and Gracie "got" performing before the camera - this was their first appearance on screen just three years after they married. For that matter, it seemed most comedians got the knack of it too. I guess being a comedian before tough live audiences made doing their act before a Vitaphone camera booth a breeze.

This short is not hard to find today. Strangely enough, quite a few of Warner Brothers' Vitaphone shorts survive while many of their feature films were either accidentally lost or deliberately destroyed in the 1940s.
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4/10
Romance and dancing
Horst_In_Translation2 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Lambchops" is an 8-minute black-and-white short film from 1929, so this one is already almost 90 years old. It includes centenarian George Burns long before his Oscar win and television legend Gracie Allen. It is basically a music number with an introduction that includes a bit of talking and lots of banter is in here too. As a whole, it is nothing too interesting unless you're a huge fan of any of the two people in here. Which I am not, probably only because I haven't seen too much from them. Anyway, this was not too interesting of a watch and that is why I overall do not recommend it. The music number was also fairly simply and really only managed to score through romance and charm instead of good range. Thumbs down.
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This actor is going places.
tom1-727 August 1999
George M. Burns, shows a lot of talent looks to me like he will make it big in show biz. But it seems to me that he could use a partner. Or perhaps a funny lady to help him carry it off.
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