American Graffiti is a coming-of-age comedy-drama film set in 1960s California. It follows a group of teenagers as they spend their last night before adulthood searching for adventures and love. The film explores themes of love, friendship, and the loss of innocence. Throughout the night, they encounter various situations, including vandalism, a car race, a robbery, and a dance party. The film captures the spirit and atmosphere of the 1960s, with a nostalgic soundtrack featuring rock-n-roll music. American Graffiti is a timeless classic that portrays the universal experiences of teenagers transitioning into adulthood.
Bobbie Jo, a waitress, and Lyle, a traveling salesman, embark on a thrilling journey filled with robbery, murder, and mayhem. As they try to outrun the law, their passionate romance intensifies, leading to unexpected twists and turns.
Two cowboys, who are down on their luck, take on various odd jobs to make some pocket money. Along the way, they encounter crooked businessmen, negotiate deals, and get caught up in hilarious situations.
In 'The Longshot,' a group of comedians and friends find themselves in debt and decide to bet on horse racing to solve their financial problems. With their wacky antics and slapstick comedy, they face numerous obstacles and mob bosses in their quest for a happy ending.
Down-and-out artist Joe Manning (John Bromfield) wakes up from a night of drunken revelry in a jail cell, where he's being held on suspicion for the murder of a nightclub singer.
Pretty girl in need of money for her dying mom's operation poses for a sculpture.
A young man is charged with statutory rape.
Liza Lee, fast-talking press agent for Al Jarvis, persuades Jarvis to stage a Musical Mystery Contest, with a $5000 prize to the person who can first name the most musical numbers and their performers. Lots of musicians perform.
The first of the series of shorts, featuring magazine-and advertising illustrator and syndicated cartoonist Jefferson Machamer, produced by Educational Pictures, for 20th Century Fox distribution, as Educational Pictures did not operate exchanges of their own. The title for this initial entry was taken from his longest-running strip, "Gags and Gals" of the several he did. This one featured, as did the others in the series, various NYC models and actresses posing in bathing suits, and various stages of getting undressed and getting dressed. Since this was 1936, those stages were usually the beginning and the end of the process.
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