IMDb RATING
6.7/10
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An unconventional dentist deals with a variety of eccentric and difficult patients in slapstick fashion.An unconventional dentist deals with a variety of eccentric and difficult patients in slapstick fashion.An unconventional dentist deals with a variety of eccentric and difficult patients in slapstick fashion.
Marjorie Kane
- Mary - Dentist's Daughter
- (as 'Babe' Kane)
Billy Bletcher
- Mr. Foliage - Bearded Patient
- (uncredited)
Joe Bordeaux
- Benford's Caddy
- (uncredited)
Harry Bowen
- Joe
- (uncredited)
Bobby Dunn
- Dentist's Caddy
- (uncredited)
George Gray
- Benford's Golf Partner
- (uncredited)
Barney Hellum
- Patient in Waiting Room
- (uncredited)
Thelma Hill
- Minor Role
- (uncredited)
Bud Jamison
- Charley Frobisher
- (uncredited)
Pete Rasch
- Benford's Tough Son
- (uncredited)
Emma Tansey
- Old Lady
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBased on the Broadway stage skit "An Episode at the Dentist" written by W.C. Fields for the "Earl Carroll Vanities" in 1928.
- GoofsThe shadow of the boom falls on the ground behind the Dentist at the golf course.
- Quotes
Benford's Tough Son: So, you're the guy that hit my father on the head.
Dentist: Yes, you want to make anything out of it.
Benford's Tough Son: [socks him in the jaw]
Arthur - The Iceman: [rising to the Dentist's defense] I'd like to see you do that again.
Dentist: Is it necessary for him to do it again?
- Alternate versionsCensored reissue prints have at least three changes:
- 1. The sexually suggestive tooth-pulling scene is removed
- 2. "They can take this golf course and st..." is blanked out
- 3. "Ah, the hell with her!" is covered by an additional patient moan.
- Also, intrusive music and sound effects were added at some point.
- The Criterion laserdisc and DVD contain a version that restores the tooth-pulling scene and the original credits, but have the censored dialog and additional music and sound effects.
- ConnectionsEdited into Down Memory Lane (1949)
Featured review
I know the movie is a comedy short, but it didn't strike me as being terribly funny. Yet that's what I've come to expect of Fields' work. True, the movie had a number of amusing lines and situations, but I find it more interesting as a peek into American life in 1932. First, the Dentist had his office in his home. Second, his all-black dental equipment, common for the time, looked like instruments of torture. Third, he had an ice box in his kitchen, not a refrigerator -- though in upper middle-class fashion of the time, it had a white enamel exterior, not wood. Though I haven't viewed the film in a number of years, I also recall the interesting wearing apparel in the golf course scenes, most notably the knickers; the clubs had wood shafts; but the course itself appeared very contemporary. Then again, the tee-fairway-green structure of golf courses is pretty much the same today as it was more than 70 years ago. True, the sound quality is very crude, but this movie was made just five years after the very first film "talkie" amazed its audiences.
Details
- Runtime21 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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