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» » Fast Company (1924)

Short summary

Early little rascals film, Mickey switches places with a kid going to stay at a hotel and invites the gang up to the room, as well as Mickey's goat, shinanigans ensue...great early look at some of the gang when they were just pee wee tykes

Director, Robert F. McGowan was injured when a camera platform collapsed and thus could not begin work on this film. Charley Chase substituted for him, but was then called away to New York to confer with Pathe executives, and the footage shot was tucked away until someone could finish it. McGowan salvaged Chase's scenes almost a year later and the film came out in 1924.

This short was screened at the Castro Theater in San Francisco, California, for the 12th Annual San Francisco Silent Film Festival, as part of a program entitled _Hal Roach: King of Comedy (1924-1929)_ (2007) in 2007.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Zaryagan
    This delightful short has all the elements that made the OUR GANG/LITTLE RASCALS so wonderful. It starts with a title card explaining that Joe Cobb's Mom and Dad are now in there 100th round of marriage… we cut to a shot of the wife pounding the husband with a rolling pin and as can only be pulled of in silents the sight-gag is a surprise and hilarious. As the story continues, we meet more delightful, cute kiddie characters just trying to be kids when opportunity for adventure comes along. The gang decides one morning to go on a swimming trip but they run across a stranger driving Mickey's goat cart and stop to get the whole story. It seems Mickey met a spoiled rich kid who never gets to play so they trade places ala THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER. The gang decides to go and visit Mickey now living it up at a ritzy downtown hotel. In the lobby we find a lady with a pet monkey, a fireworks salesman and the OUR GANG kids complete with goat cart! A very funny film that I hope to see again!
  • comment
    • Author: Kanek
    Fast Company is the sixteenth short in the "Our Gang/Little Rascals" series created by Hal Roach. Many of the boys here want to go swimming but Mickey has to make a delivery. On the way, he encounters a rich boy waiting at a station for his mom and as they get to talking they trade places since Mickey has never seen the inside of a hotel and the rich kid just wants to play. When the rich kid returns to the gang with the goat-pulling wagon, however, they resolve to go where Mickey is which is where the fun really begins...Plenty of very funny gags abound like Joe's heavyset parents arguing with the mother using a rolling pin to hit her husband that-when the target's head gets it-causes the appliance to jump up and down, Farina tries to drink some water from a hose that keeps squirting and unsquirting because of the other kid turning it off and on and when "she" finally gives up says to Ernie (via inter-title) "'At ol' water kaint make up its mind!", a hotel monkey using firecrackers to surprise many of the adult patrons, and the gang trying a pipe that later gives them a really unwelcome feeling. Long considered lost, I found Fast Company on YouTube with, I guess, the best prints that were available and with the wonderful LeRoy Shield score from the "Little Rascals" talkies added for sheer pleasure. Regular director Robert McGowan had suffered an injury when a camera platform collapsed just before this short began filming so Charley Chase (under his real name Charles Parrott) was hired in his stead though he couldn't finish it since he also had meetings with executives at Pathe, Roach's distributor at the time. So a year later, McGowan completed it and, with the help of Mrs. Roach, secured cameos for her children with Hal, Hal Jr., 6, and Margaret, 4. When Mr. Roach saw them in the screening room, he was pleasantly surprised. So on that note, I highly recommend Fast Company.
  • comment
    • Author: Araath
    This review is for people who grew up with the Little Rascals (Our Gang). I grew up watching the talkies only, though I knew there were silent films which featured Farine, Joe, Mickey and Mary when they were kids (in the talkies, you saw them a few times grown up). This short is all sight gags in the best tradition of the time: The gang goes into a hotel for the well to do to "save" Mickey and mayhem ensues. There is little need for titles, though they are here. Its just great to watch these fairly gifted young actors make you laugh.While I love some of the talkies, this little film captures the essence of the concept, that it is a group of friends who are looking to help another friend. Also, it is not race specific, everyone is the same in this film, black and white. These days, it almost appears as if they have characters of various ethnicities in TV and film so as to be "politically correct". This film was way before that wave (by decades!)and none of the acting is forced. Bravo, Hal Roach, who was way ahead of his time. TCM just ran 24 hours of Our Gang, so if they show it again, Little Rascals fans of all ages should watch this. It was fun, funny and a true delight!
  • comment
    • Author: Yayrel
    Saturday, July 14, 10:30 a. m., The Castro, San Francisco

    This absolutely hysterical Our Gang short begins with fat little Joe Cobb in bed, startled awake by his equally chubby parents sparring in the kitchen. Every time his ma clubs his old man with the rolling pin, everything that's not nailed down goes flying, including Joe! Ernie and Farina talk the kids into a day at the swimming hole, after little Farina struggles with an uncooperative hose that shuts off every time he tries to get a drink. With no one to blame, he finally shakes his fist at the neighborhood in frustration. Mickey is just setting off to deliver eggs from a cart pulled by a goat and can't go swimming (you already knew they'd never make it to the swimming hole, didn't you?), so they dawdle. He bumps into a rich kid who's waiting for an escort from the train station to his swanky hotel and they trade places. Of course, they all end up running amuck in the hotel, with a tuxedo-wearing monkey driving the cart while throwing fireworks at the adult patrons. One by one they climb up a fire escape to gain reentry. The biggest laugh in the picture comes, as the last one through the window is the goat! The gang ends up wearing grass skirts and war paint in a bizarre headhunter fantasy, before they all get sick, smoking a corncob pipe, and the hotel staff runs them off
  • comment
    • Author: Simple
    Fast Company (1924)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    Better than average Our Gang short has Mickey trading places with a rich kid who never gets to do anything "fun" due to his boring parents. Mickey gives the rich kid his goat cart and when the gang sees this other kid driving it they want to know what's going on. The gang goes to a rich hotel to look for Mickey and chaos follows. I've found many of these Hal Roach-Our Gang shorts to be lacking in terms of laughs but this one here actually managed to have a few good moments in its 14-minute running time. I think the highlight of the film has to be this goat cart, which is exactly what it sounds like. Another good moment happens once the chaos breaks loose in the hotel with one scene where a kid hides in a shower and surprises a woman getting ready to get in. The film runs about six-minutes shorter than the majority of the films in this series but I must admit that I think the shorter time actually helps everything. It makes the film seem a lot more complete and it doesn't seem as if added non-jokes are here just to expand the running time.
  • Credited cast:
    Joe Cobb Joe Cobb - Joe (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Jackie Condon Jackie Condon - Jackie McChicken (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Mickey Daniels Mickey Daniels - Mickey (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Jack Davis Jack Davis - Jack McChicken (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Allen 'Farina' Hoskins Allen 'Farina' Hoskins - Farina (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Mary Kornman Mary Kornman - Mary (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Ernest Morrison Ernest Morrison - Ernie (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Lassie Lou Ahern Lassie Lou Ahern - Little girl (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Walter Wilkinson Walter Wilkinson - Little Rondamere Von Swell (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Chester A. Bachman Chester A. Bachman - Cop
    Helen Gilmore Helen Gilmore - Woman from Traveler's Aid Society
    Charlie Hall Charlie Hall - Bellboy Who Carries Farina
    Dell Henderson Dell Henderson - Man in Lobby
    Hal Roach Jr. Hal Roach Jr. - Kid Who Douses Farina
    Lyle Tayo Lyle Tayo - Woman Whose Hat Blows Up
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