Saturday's Lesson (1929) Poster

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8/10
The devil made them do it
wmorrow5912 February 2017
This two-reel comedy is more than just an amusing film, it's a milestone: Saturday's Lesson was the last silent Our Gang short produced for the Hal Roach Studio before the series switched to the full talkie format. Happily, it's a worthy finale, a high energy romp that gives each kid a good moment or two, and leaves the viewer with a warm glow.

"When little boys have been in school all week," says the opening title card, "they have their own ideas about Saturday—" Surprisingly, this introduces a scene of luxury, in which a well-dressed Farina is served a sumptuous meal by a uniformed servant. Needless to add, it turns out to be a fantasy. All too soon, he's awakened by his angry Mama, who puts him to work beating rugs. The other kids are equally unlucky: Harry and his siblings Wheezer, Mary Ann, and Jean must eat spinach—which, of course, they hate—and then do chores. Joe's mother is angry with him over some unspecified infraction, and orders him to chop wood in the back yard as punishment. And all the rascals are warned that if they don't behave, the "devil man" will get them. Before long, the kids manage to escape their imprisonment, meet in a park, and lament their sad lot in life.

Meanwhile, a strange fellow in a devil costume is roaming the city sidewalks, advertising space heaters. (It's claimed they're "hotter than hot.") We get the sense this guy is rather eccentric; he doesn't merely advertise the product, but actually throws smoke bombs at spectators, and performs back-flips for his own amusement. He too winds up in the park, and overhears the children as they discuss shirking their chores—and also hears Farina express curiosity about the "devil man." Recognizing his cue, he appears before the astonished kids in a puff of smoke, and orders them to perform their chores. They rush home to do so, terrified, in a wild frenzy of activity. Amused, the costumed devil follows them, issues more commands to the now-compliant kids, and makes sure they follow through.

A simple description of the story cannot fully convey the appeal of this short. Where the Our Gang series is concerned, the charm of these child actors who make up the cast is crucial. (If you don't believe it, try watching some of the many pseudo-Gang comedies produced in the '20s; those other kiddie shows never rise to the same level of quality.) Farina has one of the best moments, when he first sees the alleged devil and, without further ado, simply faints dead away. Joe Cobb has several terrific, highly expressive close-ups, and so too do the girls. The best Our Gang shorts are true ensemble efforts, and Saturday's Lesson is no exception.

I was fortunate enough to have the opportunity to enjoy this film with a full audience, at a recent silent comedy festival at NYC's Museum of Modern Art, and can attest that it scored a real hit. Although there were lots of entertaining Our Gang comedies made in the talkie era, I tend to prefer the silent shorts of the '20s. It's nice to find that this chapter of the series' history came to a close with a real winner.
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8/10
Entertaining but somewhat disturbing novelty
AnnieLola12 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I wonder how much adults or children of 1929 will have laughed at this one! Seeing (admittedly blatant) naughtiness punished isn't as appealing as the Gang's usual creative shenanigans, and the message seems to be that there's simply no fun for kids on a Saturday (phooey!). One can appreciate that doing chores and eating good-for-you spinach just takes all the zest out of a kid's life. There was a real pro-spinach movement at that time, and countless youngsters were forced to choke down the detested greenery before Popeye cartoons (which didn't debut until 1933) turned spinach into a favorite. I know I always liked it because of the cartoons, and if my mother was looking the other way would grab it off my plate as a handful and stuff it into my mouth the way Popeye did. Bugs Bunny did wonders for the popularity of raw carrots, too. There's a pair of role models for you...

Anyway, in this little film the respective mothers initially seem pretty heartless as they hand out their decrees, though later after 'Satan' steps in they're overcome with concern for their frenetically slaving offspring. The no-longer-rebellious kids are understandably frantic with terror at the prospect of imminent hellfire and damnation. The real Devil?? The REAL one?? The Message of 'mind your mother and do your chores' is pounded in by the phony Lucifer, who seems a bit preachy for Satan. Wouldn't you think he'd be heartily in favor of every sort of misbehavior? Instead of registering disapproval, he should be gloating at the spectacle of all that naughtiness and the prospect of carrying those kids off to the nether regions: "you won't mind your mother, so you're MINE!" But this devil is on the side of the angels-- aside from taking a malicious delight in making those poor kids jump.

Well, it's just a comedy short, after all, and does have its moments. The pacing is snappy, and all in all it's quite an entertaining piece. When we screened it for an audience recently there were big laughs for the running gag of Joe Cobb returning to his woodpile labors time and again despite all efforts to dissuade him. On the racial side, one needs to remember that those were other times when we see Farina's mother, delighted at the boy's industrious rug-beating, predicting that he'll be a Pullman porter yet-- the highest office to which a colored man can realistically aspire, in her experience. The dialogue cards are in dialect, but could be worse. Another cringer is Farina's revelation that his father hasn't worked in 20 years-- lazy and shiftless, of course. In Roach's favor, however, is the absence of the usual over-the-top bug- eyed mugging of a black character that was considered amusing by white folks; when Farina is first confronted by the 'Devil', he simply faints, and when Mama sees him she just acts realistically frightened and runs away. This certainly compares favorably with the appalling business that mars the otherwise enjoyable "Haunted Spooks" and "Super-Hooper-Dyne Lizzies". One does note that it's the black mother who gets chased by that devil, who again, seems to be enjoying his pranks entirely too much, and has definitely crossed the line when he goes after a parent. When he reveals his little game to the collective mothers, they all laugh! Out of this debacle the white mothers end up with a mountain of split firewood, a spotless kitchen (with spinach retrieved out of the garbage and hastily gobbled up) and a tidy yard, but what does Farina's mother get? Her rugs beaten into rags-- and she's presumably the one least able to afford the cost of replacing them. Or are they rugs she's cleaning for someone else, for pay? Someone has to pay the bills in that family. This is probably a lot more analysis than this odd little opus warrants...

Then Joe faces the camera with a bleak expression (and didn't he have extraordinarily beautiful eyes!), and soberly delivers a serious message to kids that they should help their mothers and do their chores- - which is a nice sentiment, but when motivated by grim (and deluded) fear rather than any real consideration it leaves rather a bad taste. Happily, at the very end, while the kids are still under the fake devil's spell, Pete the Pup isn't so easily fooled and gets the guy by the tail! This is thrown in rather sketchily for the final iris-out, and would have had more punch with a bit more setup and payoff, but it's good to see that smug prankster taken down a peg at the last!
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8/10
That devil man is a real jerk!
planktonrules15 February 2019
The copy of "Saturday's Lesson" on YouTube is very odd, as someone took an original copy of the film and videotaped it as it played! It makes for a rather ugly print.

On this particular Saturday morning, the various kids from the gang are mad at their mothers. Some hate that they have to do chores instead of going out to play and some hate that their mom makes them eat spinach*. They rebel and meet under a nearby tree to complain about their awful mothers. However, in a scene that could only happen in films, a man dressed as a devil is nearby and he overhears the kids. Using smoke bombs, he 'magically' appears and warns them all to listen to their mothers...or else! Well, this naturally scares the crap out of the kids and they all rush home to do their chores or eat their spinach. The problem now, however, is that they are insanely devoted to their jobs and their mothers cannot stop them! And, naturally, complications result from all this niceness.

Overall, this is a very funny (albeit cruel) installment of the Our Gang comedies. Strange, naturally, but funny...especially when the kids break through the fourth wall at the end!

*By the way, in the spinach scene, the kids are given a HUGE helping of spinach and nothing else. What sort of parenting is that?! I don't mind spinach at all but if I was one of these kids, I'd refuse to eat it as well!
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10/10
The last and one of the best
Damonfordham15 July 2006
Yes, this is the last silent Our Gang/Little rascals film, and it's also one of the best! Here, the kids are upset because their parents want them to do household chores on their day off from school. They gather together in a gripe session when a heater salesman dressed as the devil to advertise his wares overhears this. He drops a smoke bomb and jumps around to scare the kids into performing their chores. What happens? I'll let you see for yourself.

This film is fall down on the floor funny. Evey adult with a bit of kid in them could identify with the fun the actor playing the devil has as he hams it up to scare the kids. There is a lot of really natural humor in the film too. One early scene has Jean and Mary's mother serving the bratty kids spinach while she has a headache. The kids express their disgust by throwing the spinach in the trash can while their mother steps out. Simple stuff, but so real that it's a hoot. This natural comedy mixes well with the fake devil's antics and as a whole, sends the Gang's career in silent movies out with a bang. A bit hard to find, but well worth it!
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9/10
Saturday's Lesson was the final silent Our Gang comedy and a good one to finish on
tavm31 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This Hal Roach comedy short, Saturday's Lesson, is the eighty-eighth in the "Our Gang/Little Rascals" series. It's also the final silent one. It begins with a well-dressed Farina at a swanky dining table with his own butler serving some chicken. He is then woken up by his mother to beat some rugs! Siblings Harry, Jean, Mary Ann, and Weezer are made to eat spinach before having to go the yard to clean it up. Joe has to split wood for his mom. They all then go to the park to relax where a man dressed as the devil also rests as he overhears them talking about the mothers' telling of the "devil man" going to threaten them if they don't do their work which gives that costumed guy an idea...This is quite a funny one-especially when the "devil" appears-to end the silent half of Our Gang's run before entering their "all-talking" phase especially when the under cranking takes place concerning their chores. It does threaten to run out of steam near the end but the thing's entertaining enough even though the print I saw on YouTube had no music or sound effects, also the whirring sound of the film projector was clearly audible throughout! Incidentally, this is one of the few films in the series in which the kids break the fourth wall and acknowledge us, the audience, when the thing's nearly over. Also incidentally, the last talkie in the series-Tale of a Dog-also dealt with a bogus illness spreading among kids. So that's a high recommendation of Saturday's Lesson. Next, the first talking entry called, ahem, Small Talk...Update: 1/30/21-I just watched a more clear print on YouTube with the familiar LeRoy Shield music score as performed by the Beau Hunks. My original rating stays.
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9/10
Last Our Gang Silent Movie
springfieldrental12 June 2022
Our Gang's final silent, non-talkie movie was "Saturday's Lessons." Even though it was filmed in early March 1929, just before the construction took place to convert Roach's studio to sound, "Saturday's Lessons" was withheld until its release in November 1929. The short's premise has the gang members ignoring their parents' instructions to do household chores on Saturday morning before going out to play. A neighbor, witnessing their insolence, dresses up as a devil and scares them because they didn't listen to their parents. The fact "Saturday's Lessons" was a silent shows the young actors in a more free-wheeling comfort level than their first talkie movie, "Small Talk."

The next few months transitioning to sound created a major overhaul in the talent pool in the Our Gang's series. Joe Cobb, Jean Darling and Harry Spear left the gang. Replacing them were Norman Chaney, Dorothy DeBorga, Mathew 'Stymie' Beard, Donald Haines and Jackie Cooper. The last actor, Cooper, remained with the Roach troupe for only two years before the producer sold his contract to MGM in 1931 for the Louis B. Mayer studio's feature films.
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