B Movie Nation

Foundational Cinema

B Movie News

Little Cigars (1973)


This movie doesn’t fit neatly into any category. It has elements of comedy, including slapstick, puns, sexual innuendo, and “witty” lines, but also contains foul language, brutal murders, robberies and assaults. Added to this lack of focus is terrible pacing. Some of this is the fault of the editor as he holds to long on a close-up of a character who has just said a “funny” line, but those extended pauses for laughs are present even when the scene does not cut away. I suppose the humor of the movie was supposed to derive from the surprise of seeing little people who are as nasty and cruel as everyone else. Even in 1972, this would not have surprised many people. This would probably have been a lot funnier if made a few years after the Wizard of Oz. The plot is nothing more than a series of “capers” that demonstrate the many clever ways you can smuggle a bunch of midgets into an establishment you are planning to rob. There’s no indication of how or why this group of con artists suddenly become brutal armed robbers. There is nothing of the con artist subtlety in their later capers. What dramatic tension there is comes from trying to decide if Cleo (Angel Tompkins) really cares for Slick, or is just stringing him along. Since neither of these characters is sympathetic, it’s hard to care to much about this.