stevea
01-27-2026, 10:44 PM
All the Cleavers, except Beaver, are going out. Gilbert comes over, and this time Beaver instigates trouble. He suggests they play adults, driving somewhere with their kids.
It's a funny scene, probably one of the funniest and best-written (by Conway and MacLane) in the series. That is, funny until Beaver releases the parking brake and the car rolls into the street, blocking traffic.
This scene requires normally quiet Pine Avenue to suddenly become the busiest road in Mayfield. And it does.
Gilbert has already done what he does best - run away when there's trouble. He runs into Wally and hastily explains what happened. So Wally rushes to the scene, finds a spare key and pulls the car back into the driveway.
Now the scene requires a cop to pull up -- never fear, of course it happens. And he issues a ticket to unlicensed Wally -- who protests, but we later learn the cop says his job is to issue tickets, and the judge's job is to listen to explanations.
Uncharacteristically, Wally and Beaver own up to this mess, and immediately explain what happened when Ward and June return. (Wally: You should have been there. Ward: Yes, I should have...been there.)
The scene shifts to what is presumed to be a courthouse, where an unfunny short scene has an unknown bit player scolding his ticketed son in the hallway, and Wally exchanging some throwaway waiting-room lines with some equally-poor-actor miscellaneous teens.
The scene then shifts to the grim-faced judge, played well by experienced character actor Maurice Manson, who admonishes both Ward and Wally-he eventually dismisses Wally with a warning.
This is a pretty funny episode, highlighted again by the Mathers/Talbot scene in the car.
Thoughts?
It's a funny scene, probably one of the funniest and best-written (by Conway and MacLane) in the series. That is, funny until Beaver releases the parking brake and the car rolls into the street, blocking traffic.
This scene requires normally quiet Pine Avenue to suddenly become the busiest road in Mayfield. And it does.
Gilbert has already done what he does best - run away when there's trouble. He runs into Wally and hastily explains what happened. So Wally rushes to the scene, finds a spare key and pulls the car back into the driveway.
Now the scene requires a cop to pull up -- never fear, of course it happens. And he issues a ticket to unlicensed Wally -- who protests, but we later learn the cop says his job is to issue tickets, and the judge's job is to listen to explanations.
Uncharacteristically, Wally and Beaver own up to this mess, and immediately explain what happened when Ward and June return. (Wally: You should have been there. Ward: Yes, I should have...been there.)
The scene shifts to what is presumed to be a courthouse, where an unfunny short scene has an unknown bit player scolding his ticketed son in the hallway, and Wally exchanging some throwaway waiting-room lines with some equally-poor-actor miscellaneous teens.
The scene then shifts to the grim-faced judge, played well by experienced character actor Maurice Manson, who admonishes both Ward and Wally-he eventually dismisses Wally with a warning.
This is a pretty funny episode, highlighted again by the Mathers/Talbot scene in the car.
Thoughts?