Laurel wrote and directed portions of the feature which was produced in late 1944 and released in May 1945. The revenge plot was reworked from their
short film Going Bye-Bye! (1934), and a tit for tat egg-breaking sequence was reprised from the
MGM all-star feature
Hollywood Party, in which the team appeared in guest roles, with other gags used that first appeared in
The Fixer Uppers (1935) and
Way Out West (1937), with other plot aspects reworked from
The Kid from Spain (1932), starring
Eddie Cantor. This was Laurel and Hardy's last American film and also the film debut of Frank McCown, who later became famous as
Rory Calhoun. Laurel and Hardy were scheduled to make another film for 20th Century-Fox in the spring of 1945, but the studio discontinued all B-picture production at the end of 1944 and closed the Laurel and Hardy unit. When
The Bullfighters became a hit, the studio offered to reopen the entire B department just for Laurel and Hardy, but the comedians declined. Thus,
The Bullfighters turned out to be Laurel & Hardy's final American film. (Their final film,
Atoll K, was produced in France in 1950–51.) ==Reception==