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4/10
Eh
boblipton6 July 2019
Vera Vague (real name: Barbara Jo Allen) and husband Lorin Raker are preparing for a dinner party with his boss, Vernon Dent and wife. The next door neighbor asks Mr. Raker to hold a lady's wrist watch for him until the morning -- it has been stolen from the boss's wife!

It's an early and essentially three-gag movie directed by Harry Edwards in a style of physical comedy that apparently did not suit Miss Vague, because she asked that all her future shorts be directed by Jules White. Although White is certainly not my cup of tea, Edward's direction is very bad. It's astonishing for the man who directed Harry Langdon's early comedy shorts and first two features! His directing career, which had begun in 1915 for Universal, would end a couple of years after this. His writing credits would continue for another ten years, but for older scripts that were reused or mined for material. He had already died in 1952 at the age of 64.
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5/10
Just being neighborly causes all sorts of problems.
mark.waltz31 August 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Trying to get dinner together doesn't work out so well for Vera Vague in this farce ridden two reeler that focuses more on site gags than plot. Yes, there is a bit of a story involving neighbors and stolen jewelry, but mostly it's Vera and her husband getting into all sorts of visual mischief thanks to everyday kitchen articles preventing them from getting dinner completed. Entertaining, yes, but rather silly and pointless.
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