Sappy Bull Fighters is a
reworking of 1942's ''
What's the Matador?, a parody of the 1941 film Blood and Sand''. Minimal recycled footage from the original was used, including long shots and voice tracks of
Curly Howard riding the bull. The film begins with an inside joke: an advertising poster promotes the Stooges, and the bottom of the poster lists another performer, one "Julio Blanco" (the Spanish approximation of producer-director Jules White). The remake was filmed over two days in mid-1957 (July 15–16, 1957), and marks
Joe Besser's screen farewell as a Stooge: it was the last Stooge short produced for and released to theaters. The films Besser made with the Stooges were released out of sequence. The last short in which Besser worked was actually
Flying Saucer Daffy, filmed in December 1957. After this last film was finished, Besser left the act to tend to his ailing wife. Besser would be succeeded by fellow Columbia
two-reel comedian
Joe DeRita (as "Curly Joe") in the trio's subsequent projects. By the time
Sappy Bull Fighters was released in June 1959, the Stooges were experiencing a rebirth in popularity, due to the release of their shorts on television. In essence, the theatrical release of
Sappy Bull Fighters actually competed with the enormously successful television revival. At 15:12
Sappy Bull Fighters is the shortest film the team made at Columbia Pictures. The longest is
A Pain in the Pullman (1936) at 19:46. == References ==