Filming for
Men in Black took place from August 28 to September 1, 1934. It holds the distinction of being the Stooge short released the fastest after its filming concluded, with a post-production time of just 27 days. The opening title music, "I Thought I Wanted You", composed by
Archie Gottler and
Edward Eliscu, is unique to this and the previous film,
Punch Drunks.
Men in Black contains the first appearance of many gags used in later shorts. For instance, this is the first of several Stooge shorts in which one of the three Stooges charges into or out of an office with a door that has a large plate-glass window, slamming the door behind them and causing the plate glass to shatter. It is also the first of many shorts where the Stooges make a liquid concoction of something (in this case, medicine) by randomly pouring together various liquids with gibberish names (a similar gag is sometimes used where the Stooges pass each other various tools with nonsensical names while operating). The Stooges have several off-the-wall dialogues with nurses, particularly the "hiccuping nurse" played by Jeanie Roberts, who affects a girlish
Betty Boop-like voice. This is also the first short that shows the Stooges repeatedly engage in a huddle while planning something out. This film contains the famous recurring dispatcher line: "Calling Doctor Howard, Doctor Fine, Doctor Howard." In this short, the three doctors get so exasperated with the repeated calls that they decide to tear down the dispatcher's call board. Amid the wreckage, a small transmitter appears on the floor, quivering and still repeating "Doctor Howard! Doctor Fine! Doctor Howard!", until they take out handguns and shoot it, causing the dispatcher to say: "Oh! They got me!" The Stooges then lift a toast and repeat the film's catch-phrase: "For duty and humanity!" Part of the dispatcher's call board was also used in the background of the dogwashing facility in the Stooges' short
Mutts to You (1938). The film title
Men in Black is a spoof of the
Clark Gable and
Myrna Loy film
Men in White (1934), released earlier that year. The Stooges, in fact, wear mostly white outfits for this film. The title has nothing to do with the contemporary meaning of the "
men in black" phrase. ==Cultural references==