Show results for
Explore
In Stock
Artists
Actors
Authors
Format
Theme
Genre
Rated
Studio
Specialty
Decades
Size
Color
Deals
- 4K Ultra HD Sale
- Action Sale
- Alternative Rock Sale
- Anime sale
- Award Winners Sale
- Blu ray Sale
- British Music Sale
- British Sale
- Classical Music Sale
- Comedy Sale
- Country Sale
- Criterion Sale
- Cult Films sale
- Drama Sale
- Electronic Music sale
- Horror Sci fi Sale
- Jazz Sale
- Metal Sale
- Music Video Sale
- Musicals on Sale
- Mystery Sale
- Naxos Label Sale
- Paramount Sale
- Rap and Hip Hop Sale
- Rock
- Rock and Pop Sale
- Rock Legends
- Soul Music Sale
- TV Sale
- Vinyl on Sale
- War Films and Westerns on Sale
What! No Beer?
- (Remastered, Manufactured on Demand)
- Format: DVD
- Rated NR
- Release Date: 11/8/2011
What! No Beer?
- (Remastered, Manufactured on Demand)
- Format: DVD
- Rated NR
- Release Date: 11/8/2011
- Starring: Roscoe Ates, Buster Keaton, Jimmy Durante, Rosco Ates, Phyllis Barry, John Miljan, Edward Brophy, Sidney Bracey, James Donlan, Al Jackson
- UPC: 883316395844
- Item #: WBA639584
- Director: Edward Sedgwick
- Rated: NR
- Genre: Comedy Video
- Release Date: 11/8/2011
- Closed Caption: No
- Original Language: ENG
- Original Year: 1933
- Run Time: 65 minutes
- Distributor/Studio: Warner Archives

Description
Two of comedy's greatest masters, Buster Keaton and Jimmy Durante, appear together in this effervescent and irreverent slapstick about a couple of regular guys trying to cash in on the end of Prohibition. Durante is a barber who talks Keaton, his dim bulb taxidermist buddy, into spending his life's savings on a brewery. Determined to be first, they start making beer before Prohibition is actually over. That makes their 'competition', bootlegging thugs, something they didn't count on! Then, Buster falls for one of the gangster's molls, the cops get into the act, and Keaton and Durante have to figure out how to get out of the beer business before they're done in! From a story by Robert E. Hopkins (Anita Loo's screenwriting partner on San Francisco), this timely farce, directed by veteran Edward Sedgwick, was called 'one solid riot of laughs... Rowdy and hoodlum fun' (The New York American).
