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Curly Howard: A Bird In The Head Mystery Cache

Hidden : 2/10/2017
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:

Resuming the series with some simple mystery caches.

A Bird In The Head is the 89th short subject starring the American slapstick comedy team The Three Stooges. The trio made a total of 190 shorts for Columbia Pictures between 1934 and 1959.


THE PLOT

The Stooges are mediocre paperhangers. Their client Mr. Beedle (Robert Williams) advises the boys to do a good job, but the end result looks like it was quickly cluttered with paper towels. Beedle is fuming, and threatens the boys, who make a quick escape across the hallway into the laboratory of the insane Professor Panzer (Vernon Dent) and his assistant Nikko (Frank Lackteen). Panzer is searching for a human brain puny enough to place in the head of his gorilla Igor (Art Miles). Curly becomes the prime candidate, and Panzer locks the boys in his lab in order to secure Curly's "contribution." Then Igor gets loose, but takes a liking to Curly, which the feeble-minded Stooge reciprocates. Eventually, the boys destroy Panzer's lab and quickly depart, taking Igor with them.

TRIVIA

The title A Bird in the Head is a pun on the phrase "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush." A Bird in the Head was filmed over a period of five days (April 9-13, 1945), which was longer than usual. Due to the death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt on April 12, filming ended early out of respect for the deceased Commander-in-chief.

41-year-old Curly Howard had suffered a series of minor strokes prior to filming A Bird in the Head. As a result, his performance was marred by slurred speech, and slower timing. This film was the first directing effort for former Columbia sound man Edward Bernds. Bernds was thrilled that he was being given a shot at directing, but was horrified when he realized that Curly was in such bad shape (something Columbia short subject head/director Jules White failed to alert Bernds of). Years later, Bernds discussed his trying experience during the filming of A Bird in the Head:

"It was an awful tough deal for a novice rookie director to have a Curly who wasn't himself. I had seen Curly at his greatest and his work in this film was far from great. The wallpaper scene was agony to direct because of the physical movements required to roll up the wallpaper and to react when it curled up in him. It just didn't work. As a fledgling director, my plans were based on doing everything in one nice neat shot. But when I saw the scenes were not playing, I had to improvise and use other angles to make it play. It was the wallpaper scene that we shot first, and during the first two hours of filming, I became aware that we had a problem with Curly."

Realizing that Curly was no longer able to perform in the same capacity as before, Bernds devised ways to cover his illness; Curly could still be the star, but the action was shifted away from the ailing Stooge. In A Bird in the Head, the action focuses more on crazy Professor Panzer and Igor. This allowed Curly to maintain a healthy amount of screen time without being required to contribute a great deal.

Bernds often commented that he and Jules White never really got along. Bernds feared that his directing days would be over as soon as they began if he released A Bird in the Head with a weak Curly as his first entry. Producer Hugh McCollum reshuffled the release order, and the superior Curly Howard: Micro-Phonies was released first, securing Bernds directing position.

PERSONAL OBSERVATIONS

This was a lackluster effort all around. Curly's illness didn't help matters any. He needed quite a bit of rest and relaxation to get himself back up to speed, but was not granted that opportunity. The writing in this one is fairly terrible, and ends with a gorilla shooting up a room. Not up to the Stooge quality. Counting down the final ten shorts in which Curly stars, this is number nine.

I looked up the proverb "A Bird in the Hand is Worth Two in the Bush":

This expression means that it is better to have an advantage or opportunity that is certain than having one that is worth more but is not so certain.

"A bird in the hand," is yours, and it's not going anywhere unless you let it go. But if you leave it and go for "two in the bush," there is no guarantee you'll catch them, you might end up with nothing in the end.

In essence, don't be greedy and stick with what good things you already have, instead of going after something you'll probably never get.

THE CACHE IS NOT AT THE POSTED COORDINATES.

Watch the following short Curly clips

Curly's Bird In The Head: Episode 89 A Bird In The Head Clip1

Curly's Pal: Episode 89 A Bird In The Head Clip2

Using A=1, B=2, C=3, etc, compute the total value of the name of the machine that shows A Bird In The Head. SUBTRACT this value from the last three digits of the posted North coordinate.

Using A=1, B=2, C=3, etc, compute total value of the name of the drink that will make you act like a monkey. ADD this value to the last three digits of the posted West coordinate.

Have fun! Get the family involved.

Curly Code: XXX-XXX NOTE: THE CURLY CODE IS NO LONGER VALID HERE

 

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