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  • Another hilarious short with ZaSu Pitts and Thelma Todd.

    I didn't know it till I watched these shorts, but ZaSu Pitts is the unrivaled mistress of physical comedy. See my review of Asleep in the Feet (1933) for more on this.

    In Bargain of the Century, she falls over the back of a chair and ends up upside down against the wall! The funniest prat fall I've ever seen! As well as one of the most acrobatic.

    Thelma Todd has more to do in this one than in the other shorts. She is a very talented comedian in her own right, but ZaSu is such a show-stealer that in the others I saw, she is relegated to basically being a straight man. She gets to be the center of quite a few laughs in this film.

    The plot is a good one. Todd gets Burtis fired by claiming she is Gilbert's daughter and getting him to assist her at a bargain sale. Gilbert walks up and the jig is up. Todd and especially Pitts feel bad and say they will find Burtis another job. They let him stay at their apartment until then.

    Burtis is an inventor and comes up with all kinds of wild contraptions to "improve" their lives, all of which make Pitts and Todd all the more anxious to see him leave.

    In the central scene of the movie, Pitts lures Gilbert up to their apartment (you've got to see how!), hoping to get him to re-hire Burtis, and the fun begins. Or, rather, continues.

    The ending is great, the best of these shorts I've seen so far. A one line zinger, and unexpected plot twist all rolled into one!

    It's hard for me to think of a better way to spend just over nineteen minutes than watching this very funny short.
  • As this film began, I was surprised to see comedian Charley Chase billed as the director. Now it did NOT surprise me that he directed this comedy short, but I was surprised because he did so using his stage name and not his given name (Charles Parrott)--like he did in many other films.

    The girls head to a department store where they are having a big sale. As the shop opens, an army of crazed customers storm the place and the place is in chaos. In a rare change from the norm for a Pitts-Todd film, there are actually quite a few laughs during this scene. Perhaps Chase at the helm was the difference, as there were more laughs in that scene than in four or five of their other films--put together! After causing an innocent cop to get fired, the ladies let him move in and set up house (remember, this is a Pre-Code film, so such goings on were allowed). When Zasu meets the police Captain by chance, she and Thelma contrive to get him to give their new friend his old job. However, ex-Officer Butterworth and the ladies manages to make more a nuisance of themselves than anything else. Can they somehow, in spite of this, manage to impress the Captain and get Butterworth his job? Well, tune in and see for yourself.

    Aside from the department store scene, it was also fun seeing Gilbert go crazy towards the end. While there were a few flat moments, however, they were few and the film managed to do something few of the team's other films did---made me laugh and was entertaining! Well worth seeing.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    "Say, is that palooka trying to flirt with me?" That's how motorcycle police officer James Burtis replies when he stops driver Thelma Todd and is ogled by the fluttery Zasu Pitts. The speeding Todd and Pitts are on their way to the bargain sale of the century, a set of bed sheets for 67 cents. One per person, the sign indicates, so Pitts and Todd cuddle up to Burtis to go with them so they can get three sets. Pretending to be the lieutenant's daughter, Pitts coos and rolls her eyes up and down until he agrees. Of course, every woman in town has their eye on a pair of sheets, and Burtis's efforts to get a pair includes him tickling all of the women in front of him so he can get in front of them. Eventually he gets a sock in the nose, by Todd no less, while Pitts tries it and gets a portly man who gives her his phone number. They come out of the sale with sheets, but with their clothes ripped up, and when the real lieutenant shows up, he fires Burtis which makes the girls responsible for him. Mistaking a bell captain for the police captain, Pitts and Todd invite him up so he'll give Burtis a job, but instead, all havoc ensues thanks to an attempted magic trick with a watch, Pitts' ice cream maker and several attempts at security alarms including a boxer's glove which shoots out of a closet door to punch everybody in the kisser.

    This is typical Hal Roach slapstick, most of it funny, some of it silly. Pitts and Todd, wrapping up their series of shorts before Patsy Kelly took over in Pitts' place, are an adorable pair of friends, with Pitts' jittery personality a total contrast to Todd's cool confidence. Burtis isn't quite the typical 1930's dumb copper, but he's no rocket scientist, either. With fragmented English and wacky accent, Billy Gilbert gets the Edgar Kennedy slow burn too as he watches in agony as Burtis seemingly smashes up his watch which for some reason ends up in an old fashioned ice cream maker. There's plenty of laughs of the typical Roach variety, and at two reels is harmless fun. Perhaps not one of the funniest of the pairings, it is still enjoyable and at least got me to look up the word "palooka" which I'm sure has since disappeared from many dictionaries.
  • Having achieved success with Laurel and Hardy's shorts, producer Hal Roach decided to create a female comedy team in 1931. He paired sultry Thelma Todd with plain-jane ZaSu Pitts. The comediennes immediately clicked with moviegoers and continued making two-reelers until Pitts was replaced by Patsy Kelly in 1933.

    BARGAIN OF THE CENTURY was one of the last Todd-Pitts shorts. As in their other films, the stars' charming personalities boost this one. Thelma Todd's glamour and levelheadedness effectively counterpoints ZaSu Pitts's drabness and dizziness. Despite their contrasts, one perceives a companionable bond between them.

    The scenario isn't much. The girls accidentally get a policeman friend, Butterworth(James Burtis,) fired. Mistaking someone (Billy Gilbert) for the police captain, they try to play up to him so Butterworth can get his job back. What makes BARGAIN OF THE CENTURY move along are the comedic set ups and gags. Particularly hilarious are a series of booby traps for crooks that Butterworth sets up when he temporarily moves into the girls' apartment. These traps not only provide funny inconveniences for Todd and Pitts, but they also help humorously resolve the plot.

    The supporting cast is fine with Billy Gilbert standing out as the "captain." His German accent is funny in itself. And he is ferociously hilarious when he rages over a prized watch ZaSu accidentally broke, assaulting every clock he can find in the girls' apartment.

    This two-reeler was the only one in the Todd-Pitts series directed by comedy legend Charley Chase. He handles the comedy with flair and energy, making sure that the gags supplement but never overwhelm the stars. It's a pity Chase never directed any other Todd-Pitts shorts or any Todd-Kelly shorts for that matter.

    BARGAIN OF THE CENTURY not only exemplifies a prime showcase for Thelma Todd and ZaSu Pitts but also a prime showcase for Hal Roach comedies as well. This two-reeler easily measures up to the best of fellow Roach stars Laurel and Hardy, Our Gang, and Charley Chase.
  • gbill-7487722 September 2020
    The comedy is quaint at best, but Thelma Todd and ZaSu Pitts have a certain charm to them which makes it palatable. Gotta love that extendo-boxing-glove coming out of the closet too.
  • boblipton16 September 2020
    When Thelma Todd and Zasu Pitts get their new pal James Burtis fired from the police force, they have to let him move into their apartment. He turns out to be an inventor of anti-theft. devices that render their apartment a death trap. Things grow complicated when Zasu slips on a banana peel and stage-Dutch police captain Billy Gilbert carries her to the apartment.

    Charley Chase directs this episode of THE GIRL FRIENDS. He reaches into his bag of gags, including his 1927 FLUTTERING HEARTS, the failed watch trick, and mechanical gadgets. Mostly, it relies on the top comic talents of the four players. Even Burtis gives a fine performance. He entered films in 1930 and by the time he died in 1939 at age 46. he had appeared on more than 120 shorts and features.
  • Bargain of the Century, The (1933)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    This here is one of the best Thelma Todd and Zasu Pitts shorts that I've seen and I can't help but think some of the success has to be due to Charley Chase who directed the film. Todd and Pitts lie to a cop (James Burtis) so that he will help them get some cheap sheets at a department store. The cop ends up getting fired so he moves in with the girls and slowly drives them crazy. The women invite the captain (Billy Gilbert) to diner to try and get the cops job back but things don't go as planned. I'm really not a fan of the Pitts-Todd shorts but I found this one here to be quite entertaining since it has many laughs and some all around nice touches. I also couldn't help but think that Chase's timing as a director really helped this film as it's not the typical film you'd expect from the group. This time out it really seems as Todd and Pitts are working together and we're given some real chemistry between the two. I thought them working together against Burtis made for some nice laughs and when Gilbert enters the picture it just gets better. The gag with the watch and the ice cream was very impressive and manages to get some nice laughs. The final joke in the film works quite nicely as well. The film is still no classic but there are enough laughs to make it worth sitting through.