Elliott laughed. It was a strange sound, unfamiliar in his own throat. It started as a cough, then turned into a wheeze, and finally, as Curly, wearing a chef’s hat, tried to strangle a loaf of bread, it became a full-throated, idiotic guffaw. Tears blurred the screen.
The Columbia Pictures logo. Grainy, majestic. Then: “The Three Stooges in… Punch Drunks .”
He pressed play on “Disorder in the Court.” And as Curly began his gibberish testimony, Elliott leaned into the microphone and said, “Let me show you what grace looks like.”
He’d been invited to do a “Criterion Closet” video—an online series where auteurs weep over Bergman and wax poetic about Kurosawa. Elliott was supposed to pick Jeanne Dielman . Or Come and See . Something heavy. Something that proved his soul had depth. The Three Stooges Complete
“Hey, Elliott? We’re ready for you. Criterion’s on Zoom.”
But here he was, alone with the Stooges.
The Three Stooges Complete . 20 discs. 190 shorts. 25+ hours of eye-pokes, scalp-saws, and the most exquisitely stupid sound effects ever committed to magnetic tape. Elliott laughed
And there they were. Moe, the tyrant with the haircut like a helmet. Larry, the frantic sheepdog with the tumbleweed hair. Curly, the baby-man, the id in a too-small vest. They moved like a single, malfunctioning organism. Moe would slap, Larry would flinch, Curly would circle his finger in the air and go, “I’m a victim of soicumstance.”
He wiped his face with his sleeve. He looked at the shelf of solemn, respected films: The Rules of the Game , Seven Samurai , Paris, Texas . Then he looked at the stack of twenty discs on his lap. The complete works of the three most beautiful idiots who ever lived.
The bottle was warm. Not the pleasant, sun-soaked warmth of a New York fire escape, but the stale, recycled heat of a television studio green room. In here, time didn’t pass; it congealed. Elliott, a film critic whose byline commanded respect but whose bank account commanded little else, held the DVD case like a holy relic. Tears blurred the screen
He watched three shorts back-to-back. “Men in Black” (the hospital one— “Calling Dr. Howard, Dr. Fine, Dr. Howard…” ). “A Plumbing We Will Go” (the one where the bathtub bursts through the floor). And “Micro-Phonies” (the one with the opera singer and the recording of Curly’s “Swinging the Alphabet”).
He held up the big, black box.