Babes in Toyland

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Movies

One of my favorite movies as a child is on TV every year around this time, Babes in Toyland, or as it is also titled The March of the Wooden Soldiers.  It was just on again the other day.  In this Laurel and Hardy film from the 1930's the hapless Stan figures out that they can use the 6 foot tall wooden soldiers to fight the evil Silas Barnabas and his Bogeymen who had come to attack the village.   As Stan and Ollie push the black buttons on each of the wooden soldiers, they all come to life, start marching, and of course save the town.

 

I loved that scene when I was a young boy.  The soldiers were lined up, motionless, and Ollie and Stan were right next to them when they were pulling out boxes of darts to hurl at the Bogeymen.  "The wooden soldiers, the soldiers!" I would say to myself, jumping up and down until Stan also noticed them and started to push the buttons.

 

The other films I loved as a boy were The Sound of Music, The Wizard of Oz and The Ten Commandments.   They had a huge impact on me.  And I realized that all of those movies invovled good and evil; the Bogeymen, the Nazis, the Wicked Witch and the Pharoah, and heroes who overcame them.   That is usually the conflict and tension in films, bad guys vs. the good guys.   As a child, it was nice when goodness won.  And it still is.

Comments

Fred Klein

I knew we had something in common: Babes was my favorite, but not so much as Oz took years off my young life
Ester Horowitz

I told my daughter about Babes in Toyland the other day. Almost thirty she said "What?" It's time to tape the movie so we can bring it to another generation.

Submitted by Janet_Adler on Sun, 12/29/2013 - 01:01

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Janet Adler

I don't remember much from childhood but I do remember Bambi. I am still crying inside. I think my mother, who is long gone, would still be sorry she ever took me to see that movie.

Submitted by Debra_Adler on Sun, 12/29/2013 - 04:45

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Debra Adler

Watching The Wizard of Oz the other day, as an adult, I realized I am part Tin Man and part Scarecrow and would take care of the Lion forever. Think that's because I watched it every year growing up and now own the DVD?
Corey Bearak

I never took to the Laurel and Hardy version. I liked what the 1961 Disney version -- http://tiny.cc/iyrv8w -- with Tommy Sanda, Annette, Ray Bolger and Ed Wynne -- which I also recently discovered is available to view via YouTube -- http://tiny.cc/c3rv8w.

As to movies when I was younger and made a difference, The Avenger - The Legend of Aeneas (Think back to Fred's blog on loyalty.) starring Steve Reeves and Reeves two Hercules Movies, 55 Days in Peking, Lawrence of Arabia, Ivanhoe, Cast A Giant Shadow and The Longest Day. As kids I recall Jonathan fond of The Ten Commandments and Marisa very fond of Meet Me In St. Louis (which I never saw until my daughter kept viewing it)

Submitted by Lucas_Meyer on Thu, 01/02/2014 - 01:24

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Lucas Meyer

I'm with Mitch on "It's A Wonderful Life." The movie on a certain level glorifies the quintessentially American faith in civil society, and nearly seventy years after the picture was released I am privileged to live in a small town that continues to embrace the values so beautifully portrayed by the late Jimmy Stewart's character, George Bailey.

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