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46 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Our Gang's all-time lamest films
First off-the-bat, these are all 52 remaining Our Gang films, from 1938-1944, NOT 1942 as the description above reads. These 10-minute short films are the worst in Our Gang's history but I'm giving this collection five stars...and I'll tell you why. During the last few shorts during the Hal Roach period, Our Gang films began their downslide, as Spanky & Alfalfa were older...
Published 24 months ago by John Robinson

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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars The Decline of Our Gang
Do not confuse the 52 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer shorts with the classic comedies produced by Hal Roach Studios. When Roach sold Our Gang to MGM in 1938, the creative spark quickly diminished until the series became unwatchable. Apart from the initial 1938-39 shorts (highlighted by "The Little Ranger," "Aladdin's Lantern," "Men in Fright" and "Alfalfa's Aunt"), these one-reel...
Published on October 10, 2009 by Scott T. Rivers


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46 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Our Gang's all-time lamest films, February 8, 2010
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This review is from: Our Gang Comedies (DVD)
First off-the-bat, these are all 52 remaining Our Gang films, from 1938-1944, NOT 1942 as the description above reads. These 10-minute short films are the worst in Our Gang's history but I'm giving this collection five stars...and I'll tell you why. During the last few shorts during the Hal Roach period, Our Gang films began their downslide, as Spanky & Alfalfa were older and getting hammier in their acting. Once Roach sold the rights to MGM, the series took a nosedive - but they still had some good moments. The best actor from 1938-1940 was Tommy Bond (Butch) who is a more polished, natural actor; also, Sid Kibrick (Woim) is great as Butch's sidekick, even though his dialogue is limited to lines like, "yeah, Butch." But Spanky and Alfalfa became the worst "Our Gang" actors the older they got; Darla has moments of lameness too, but not to the extreme of Spank & Alf. Buckwheat was OK but was worse in the Gang's final years, 1942-1944. Porky left early, followed by Butch, Alfalfa, Darla (who was just starting to beautifully blossom) and finally, Spanky. They were eventually replaced by Mickey, Froggy & Janet; these last years (1941-1944) are referred to as "The Froggy Years" as one would complain about the awfulness of the films - but it's unfair to Billy "Froggy" Laughlin, as he was actually the series' saving grace. His acting was not as bad as we all thought - he actually pulls off some very funny moments, but we have to suffer through the awful, preachy plotlines to get to 'em....you also get to hear Froggy's REAL voice in a few of these films.

What else made these lame? Little things.

1) No Pete The Pup...the remainder of dogs were these little yappy dogs that always get under your feet with names like "Whiskers" and "Rover" - not big, lovable lugs like all the Petes during the Roach years.

2) New, lesser "Gang" members with names like "Fatty" (no fatter than Spanky) and "Happy" (who has one of the biggest sourpuss faces and is anything BUT happy).

3) Waayyyyy too many episodes had the gang putting on a show for one reason or another. Yawn. (Runnin' outta ideas?)

4) The opening/closing theme - a medley of "London Bridge Is Falling Down/Farmer In The Dell." If they had kept the original theme it really, really woulda helped.

5) Too many episodes where we, the audience, are supposed to learn a lesson. At certain points, some adult - a judge or equivalent of - looks right into the camera and addresses the audience with lines like "if each parent would take more time to teach their kids, blah-blah-blah." Also, too many "moral" episodes where the kids themselves get too preachy, especially Spanky; he becomes the "goody-goody" of the gang, which makes my heart sink. Mickey (Robert Blake) comes a close second. The worst of the bunch? "Time Out For Lessons," where Alfalfa learns that he should balance time between his football playing and schoolwork; after telling the gang "we're not gonna practice until we've done our homework" and his dad tells him to balance play with work, Alfalfa leaves to play football with the rest of the gang and utters, "FROM NOW ON, WE TAKE TIME OUT FOR LESSONS!!!" In real life, he'd probably be kicked off the team.

6) Terrible special effects. Scenes when gang members go flying through the air look amateurish with wires clearly visible.

So, why do I give this collection 5 stars?

1) This is the first, and possibly only time you'll have the chance to get this complete collection of the rest of the gang films.

2) It's also important that you watch and learn how NOT to treat a beloved series; either step up the quality or bow out entirely. Filmmakers should watch the "Our Gang" films beginning with the Hal Roach sound films (1929-1937) and then observe how the series deteriorated with these MGM episodes. A great, great filmmaking lesson is to be learned here.

3) For collectors of comedy films of this period, it's a vital collection.

4) The quality - video & audio - is top-notch.

5) It's very family-friendly - probably even more so than then the original Hal Roach films (still contain some racial humor but less than the Roach films).

So, yes, even with all it's flaws - AND THERE ARE MANY - it's still important for serious collectors. Five stars? Most definitely.


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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars The Decline of Our Gang, October 10, 2009
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Scott T. Rivers (Los Angeles, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Our Gang Collection (52 Shorts 1938-1942) (DVD-R)
Do not confuse the 52 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer shorts with the classic comedies produced by Hal Roach Studios. When Roach sold Our Gang to MGM in 1938, the creative spark quickly diminished until the series became unwatchable. Apart from the initial 1938-39 shorts (highlighted by "The Little Ranger," "Aladdin's Lantern," "Men in Fright" and "Alfalfa's Aunt"), these one-reel travesties lack the charm and spontaneity of the Roach efforts. Spanky, Buckwheat and the gang were badly served by MGM's joyless, heavy-handed approach. On the plus side, the DVD set features excellent and uncut 35mm prints - which cannot be said for the sloppy RHI/Genius "Little Rascals" collection.
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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Whole Exceeds the Sum of the Parts, March 14, 2010
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This review is from: Our Gang Comedies (DVD)
This five-disc set presents, with superb sound and visual quality, the final six years of the Our Gang series. Hal Roach started the Our Gang comedies back in 1922 and produced seven years of silent comedy shorts followed by another nine years of talking episodes, the latter of which are well-known to baby boomers from their television syndication as "The Little Rascals." In 1938 Roach sold the production rights for the Gang to MGM, which had already been distributing the Roach films to theaters since the late 1920's. The post-Roach shorts have always been presented as starring "Our Gang," and are the ones featured in this set. They too have been shown on syndicated television and various VHS/DVD compilations over the years, and have shown up occasionally on Turner Classic Movies, but this is the first complete set of what Our Gang experts call "The MGM's" or "The Final 52."

The films in this package are presented chronologically, which means that the first disc is by far the best, and the fifth disc is hands down the worst. When MGM first took over the series, the shorts had many of the elements that made the late-30's Hal Roach Rascals films classics: the likeable leader "Spanky" McFarland, the determined singer "Alfalfa" Switzer and his fickle girlfriend Darla Hood, who by the way is the real musical talent of the Gang, the lovable younger tagalongs "Buckwheat" Thomas and "Porky" Lee, and the convincing villains Tommy "Butch" Bond and Sidney "The Woim" Kibrick. Many of the episodes focused on Alfalfa's efforts to steal Darla's heart away from tough Butch or nerdy "Waldo," or sometimes both! These episodes are very well-made and enjoyable.

As the MGM years rolled on, the stories became more and more moralistic. Time Out for Lessons, a 1939 title on Disc 2, is a good description of the direction in which MGM was steering the series: Rewards are the good work, not the glory. Education is more important than play. Don't envy children who have more wealth than you. Cross the street safely. Don't Lie! Support your Uncle Sam during wartime. With the shorts continuing production until 1944, wartime life and lesson-teaching became the main themes of these so-called "comedies." This reviewer gives the first disc four stars out of five, the next two, three stars, the fourth one, only two stars, and just a single star for the last. But, the whole is indeed greater than the sum of the parts. For its good reproduction quality and completeness, I give four stars to the set as a whole, and would give five if not for the lack of DVD extras and any accompanying booklet.

Children age and change quickly and cast turnover was an ongoing problem for Our Gang. Adorable Porky Lee, Buckwheat's little true-blue pal, suddenly grew into a very tall child: taller than Spanky who was five years older. MGM gave Porky a pink slip and his film career was finished. Several of the other kids stayed well past their prime: Spanky stayed until age 14, Alfalfa, Butch, and Buckwheat each remained until 13, and Darla departed as a very mature-for-her-age 10-year-old. Unfortunately, the new cast members were some of the least appealing characters in the history of The Little Rascals/Our Gang.

As an adult, Robert Blake (star of In Cold Blood, Baretta, and countless "entertainment" tabloid criminal court features) was embarrassed by his performances as "Mickey" of Our Gang. Who wouldn't be? Mickey Gubitosi (his real name, which was given to his character) started out as a simpering, shrugging, blubbering little brat with a thick Jersey accent who couldn't act his way out of a teardrop. The studio worked on him, changed his name to Bobby Blake and his character's to Mickey Blake, and while at least his line readings improved, his role as the smiling goody-good boy kept him just as annoying on the screen. No Gang of any kind would want this kid in it.

After Spanky left, the lead actor in Our Gang was Billy "Froggy" Laughlin who had some acting skill and a unique persona with his platinum blond hair, Harry Truman specs and croaky speaking voice. The trick voice gimmick grew stale, though, after the first few films, and worse, Froggy was rarely given funny things to say, and when he was, bad direction made even those jokes unfunny. Froggy was born too late (to have worked in the better stories and gags in the Hal Roach films) and died much too soon (at 16, in a motor scooter/truck collision, only 4 years after the last Our Gang comedy.)

Perhaps no child generates as much disdain from Our Gang fans as Janet Burston, who replaced Darla in 1942. It was obvious that Janet was trying to be another Miss Temple, with her golden hair in Shirleycurls, but the talent wasn't enough and the personality was wrong. Janet's mugging and overacting make Mickey Gubitosi/Blake seem like Alec Guinness. She managed to make the annoying stories and jokes of the last two years of Our Gang twice as annoying as they already were. This reviewer shares her first name and belongs to an Our Gang online group where she is always quick to remind the fellow members that she is NOT the Janet who was actually in the Gang!

So, who should buy this set?
* Die-hard fans of the Rascals who have enough interest in the series to want to watch and own it all. (Casual fans should buy the Hal Roach Little Rascals set instead.)
* Those interested in WWII era film history
* Those old enough to have been youngsters at the time these films were made. They will enjoy the nostalgia of seeing the clothes, automobiles, and décor of their youth.
* Historians of Black film actors. Buckwheat's one of the best-loved film characters of all time, and although there are too many elements of racism (for instance, in several episodes he's all excited about watermelon) he is treated more like just another kid in the Gang in these films than in those made by Roach. The evolution from Farina through Stymie, and finally Buckwheat, cannot be accurately examined without these later shorts. Listen to Buckwheat speak about Lincoln in Election Daze. Such a speech would have made him President of Our Gang's All-For-One Club in a just society. Thankfully, we indeed are closer to that kind of justice today. But throughout these films, Buckwheat is the type of person anyone should like to have for a friend.
* MGM history buffs.
* Fans of character actors of the 30's and 40's. Many familiar faces turn up here and there: Ava Gardner as a cinema ticketseller, Andy Hardy's "Aunt" Sara Haden as a beloved teacher, Leave it to Beaver's Hugh Beaumont as a court assistant, Mickey Rooney's father as a dental patient, and many more.

The box bears a warning on the back: "The Our Gang Collection is Intended for the Adult Collector and is Not Suitable for Children." It would be more accurate to say that the content includes racist material that was common for its time and left in, though offensive, for historical purposes. Children of today might enjoy some of these films, but may be quite bored by some of the topical situations like war bonds, not to mention the lesson-teaching plots. There is slapstick, music, fun, and of course, many kids doing real-kid things like playing, fighting, trying to earn money, and just being with their pals. Adult collectors should buy this set to watch alone, or with their kids, along with conversations about the culture and humor of these times gone by.

Must-have additions:
The Little Rascals: The Complete Collection
The Little Rascals: The Life and Times of Our Gang

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A/V Quality Is Superb Compared To . . ., February 21, 2010
This review is from: Our Gang Comedies (DVD)
Great audio and video quality add life to these often-tepidly written and awkwardly "acted" shorts. Sure, there's no "School's Out," "Bored of Education," or "Glove Taps" in the MGM shorts, but a lot of them have that B-movie WWII style of MGM humor that still hits the mark. The earlier Roach comedies were of a different era, a different palette of colors to paint from, but if it's a nostalgic romp down Our Gang Lane you seek, or at least a window into American short subjects from the late 30's and early '40s, this is an essential collection. Wish that the other collections of the earlier shorts had this type of crisp DVD quality.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Few Good Shorts But Not Many, January 4, 2010
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This review is from: The Our Gang Collection (52 Shorts 1938-1942) (DVD-R)
Why anyone would want to collect these Our Gang comedies is beyond me. Just for the sake of owning all of them I suppose. After Hal Roach Studios sold the rights to MGM in 1938 things went downhill fast. The first films from MGM continue the Our Gang comedy tradition very nicely. The Little Ranger Men In Fright Aladdin's Lantern Practical Jokers are very funny. Afterwards the series quickly changed into the kids teaching someone a lesson or someone teaching the kids a lesson. There were a few more good funny Our Gang films later on but not many. About 15 of these altogether are genuine Our Gang comedy. Forget the rest they aren't worth watching. If you really want to buy this dvd set I'd wait until the price comes down a bit. $62.00 is a bit expensive considering you get no extra features whatever.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Our Gang + MGM = Bad Comedy, September 5, 2010
This review is from: The Our Gang Collection (52 Shorts 1938-1942) (DVD-R)
I'm amazed at the reviewers who have given this Our Gang DVD collection five stars. We're talking Spanky and Company at their worst! The first half-dozen shorts from 1938 are OK, then MGM trashes the series beyond recognition. Though Hal Roach stopped producing comedy shorts for economic reasons, it must have pained him to see what Leo the Lion did to his beloved property. If you are truly an Our Gang completist, then consider Roach's "Hide and Shriek" the grand finale.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A Look at How M.G.M. Ruined the Little Rascals, May 25, 2010
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This review is from: Our Gang Comedies (DVD)
First of all, these are not the classic 20 minute Our Gang films (featuring the "Little Rascals") that were produced by Hal Roach in the 1930s. Those were the films you laughed at on TV when you were a kid. Instead, these are the 10 minute imitations of those classics that were produced at M.G.M. in the 1940s. Although they initially featured many of the same Rascals, these films are, for the most part, vastly inferior to the earlier Roach films.
All is not lost though, for there are some that are very entertaining. "Goin' Fishing", "Kiddie Kure", "Alfalfa's Aunt", "Bubbling Troubles" and a few others are almost as good as the Roach films. Most of these are on the first two discs. But as the series went on, the quality declined considerably. By the time you get to disc five, many of the films are absolutely terrible. They alternate between Song & Dance shows (which feature mostly professional dancers with only brief appearances by the Gang themselves), and shorts which spend the whole ten minutes trying to teach a "Lesson" (such as "Don't run into the street without looking both ways first, or you may get hit by a car"). Neither of these formats offer anything even remotely funny.
The films are presented in the order they were released (not the same as the order they were filmed). There are no extras either on the discs, or in the form of any kind of booklet. For real fans of the Little Rascals who have to see everything, this set does have some good shorts. But the average fan will be better off getting the collection of the earlier Little Rascals movies instead.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars OUR GANG SHORTS COLLECTION, February 2, 2010
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Laura Hunter (Jacksonville, Oregon) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Our Gang Comedies (DVD)
Can't tell you how long I have waited for this form of video to come out. I have been wanting the "Fightin Fools" short ever since I saw it once on TV, but none of their dvd's had this show. I recommend this to anyone who loves the Little Rascals/Our Gang. These shorts are hilarious and I know your kids will love them too. Thanks Warner Bros for finally coming out with this collection.
Laura
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Maybe not their funniest moments, but some good ones nevertheless..., February 17, 2011
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This review is from: Our Gang Comedies (DVD)
Sure, the story plots got to be retreads at times, the kids got a bit hammier as they got older and the new faces in the crowd couldn't quite live up to the reputation of OUR GANG in their salad days, but that's no reason to rule out seeing this collection at least once. Some of these MGM short films are actual gems. One of the last titles in the collection is one of my favorites, "Calling All Kids." It was the last stage musical episode done by the Little Rascals, but when it involves a heartfelt salute to our troops in wartime... talk about going out with a bang! Okay, maybe a bang and a whimper or three, but don't let that be an excuse to limit your Rascals exposure. Take it ALL in...
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars why buy here ?, August 15, 2010
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This review is from: Our Gang Comedies (DVD)
you can get this set at warner brothers archive website for 30 some bucks why pay more here?
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