Ko-Ko the Clows sets up the song "Darling Nelly Gray".
1809 Matches Found
Ko-Ko the Clows sets up the song "Darling Nelly Gray".
A Mutt and Jeff short.
A entry from Paul Terry's Aesop's Fables series.
Film adaptation of the play by the brothers Álvarez Quintero
This industrial film charts the first 100 years of pipemaker Spang Chalfant & Company, in conjunction with the history of the Western Pennsylvania region over that time period.
Documentary about India
Follow Waffles the dog, as he enters quarantine, after arriving in England on the Queen Mary with his owner.
A Mutt & Jeff cartoon.
Scenes of the former kaiser in what later became known as the Weimar Republic, and his other travels at the time.
Jane's father favors one of her suitors, her mother another one, and Jane a third one. She gets the first two suitors to have a boxing match to determine the best man, while she and her favored suitor elope.
Six-part film showing the development of the city of Pereira based on a love story, which was only a pretext to show the origin, advancement and progress of the city of Pereira. Of this production there are testimonies of its realization and exhibition, however only one photograph is preserved.
A documentary about nature's oddities.
Documentary following a trip across the Atlantic Ocean with S/S Stavangerfjord from Norway to New York, where the trip continues with train across America.
Jiu-jitsu for ladies, how to get ink off a white apron and other life essentials courtesy of the 'Hints and Hobbies' team.
Felix goes searching for a lost collar-button.
A hungry Felix goes to a fair, where he makes a deal for some meat.
A traveling circus comes to town, and Felix attends.
Felix builds a submarine.
Felix begins to worry, to the detriment of his health.
Short documentary about social democratic "Red Vienna" of the 1820s.
Comedy-horror hijinks ensue after the female member of a team of explorers is kidnapped by an Egyptian king for his harem.
Quadri d’Abruzzo opens with D’Annunzio’s I pastori and then wanders through villages, landscapes, weddings, songs, work and folklore. We know very little about the actuality films of those years. It makes us want to look for more of them. (Andrea Meneghelli)
Buster Brown gets upset when Mary Janes invites him to a party and she gives all her attention to a new boy. Mary Jane is upset because Buster got upset. Tige sets out to get Buster back in Mary Jane's good graces. A piece of tobacco in a candy sack seems like a good idea.
The film makes fun of society and the world through protagonist Mungtung Choe and his friends Ba-ram and Gi-saeng.
An aspiring writer chases after a pair of crooks when her handbag is taken.
A film editor makes a mistake when editing the picture and watches in horror at the film's first public screening.
Al Alt will get a million dollars if he wears a particular hat for six months. It's a sort of a too-small, soft-felt derby with a very large panache.
The film introduces and discusses the technical aspects of making talking pictures. It is the first film using the Vitaphone sound film system developed at Bell Laboratories. Originally presented to the New York Society of Electrical Engineers in 1926, Edward B. Craft, the Executive Vice President of Bell Labs, gives the address and demonstration.
A 1926 documentary short film.
Spanish comedy short where Secundino Fernández is trying to get himself dressed up nicely.
A film preserved by the UCLA Film and Television Archive
A short animated film about how to keep germs at bay.
Adventure series; churches, businesses and schools in Okmulgee, OK; Tulsa, OK; Muskogee, OK.
Various scenes in Switzerland, Italy, Egypt, and Israel.
The new Palace of the Chamber of Deputies of Rio de Janeiro, still unoccupied: exteriors, interiors and facilities. The Mass and blessing of the Palace celebrated by the Archbishop of Rio, D. Sebastiao Leme. Official inauguration; speech of the mayor Arnolpho Azevedo.
This is the cartoon version of Comin' thro' The Rye by fleischer Studios.
A animated commercial for Stomatol toothpaste.
Schafer Bros., one of the largest lumber businesses in the Northwest at its peak in the 1920s, commissioned several movies on their operations. The 77-minute-long "A Story of West Coast Lumber" captures that company's extensive woods, rail, water and sawmilling activities.
Felix The Cat gets a job protecting a cheese shop from three industrious mice. When he foils their plans, they head off for Switzerland in search of bigger and better cheeses - but Felix is in pursuit.
A U.I.C. production. Animation featuring Jerry the Troublesome Tyke - a cartoon dog. Jerry stands in front of a large mirror combing his hair/ears. M/S of Sid Griffiths sitting at the drawing board. He points a finger at the drawing on an easel in front of him. "What's all the fuss about?" he asks. Jerry says: "I've entered myself for the dog show!" Sid sits back in his chair. Jerry flexes his ears backwards and forwards. He makes his ears all pointed. "What price me as an Alsatian?" Sid shakes his head. He puts a brush on his head and says: "Think I'll do as one of these?" Sid shakes his head. "Well give me a few spots and I'll go as a Dalmatian!!" shouts Jerry.
Animation featuring Jerry the Troublesome Tyke - a cartoon dog. A cartoon curtain rises. A U.I.C. production. Intertitle reads: "Dead Men tell no tales - but these speak for themselves!" Illustration shows some beer bottles on the ground. We see Jerry standing beside the bottles pouring himself a beer. He is standing beside the clubhouse of a golf course drinking the beer of another golfer who is having a snooze. This film seems to follow on from the other Jerry film called: "Jerry the Troublesome Tyke - Golf."
Exterior of a "general store". The shopkeeper comes out and whistles through his fingers. Jerry comes running and stands on his nose. He spins on his nose. The shopkeeper says: "You mind the store and look out for thieves." "Trust me boss!" says Jerry. He flexes his muscles. Shopkeeper goes off, Jerry laughs and goes inside the shop.
Tired of her grueling and unglamorous day-to-day life as a rural housewife, Jane Jones takes a vacation to the city where she stays with her sister Hattie, and her ideals of the city are dispelled.
“Tramp, Tramp, Tramp the Boys Are Marching” features a song that dates back to the Civil War, one which was still familiar to audiences of the 1920s. The cartoon begins as Koko the Clown emerges from an inkwell-- an iconic image for animation buffs --and then steps over to a chalkboard to draw an orchestra. The band, “Koko's Glee Club,” marches to a nearby cinema (accompanied by a dog who beats cymbals with his tail) where they lead the audience in the title song.
Walter comes home drunk from a fancy dress ball he has attended as a convict. His father announces that he has been a wastrel long enough and throws him out. After sleeping it off in the bushes, he learns that a convict has escaped and the cops are after Walter.
It includes: a ceremony in homage to the memory of Don Andrés Avelino Aramburú; horse races in the President of the Republic Classic; and the latest fashions from Maison Adele.