Shoulder Arms is a comedic silent film that takes place during World War I. The film follows the adventures of a soldier who experiences various mishaps and comedic moments while serving in the army. With its clever satire and humorous take on military life, Shoulder Arms provides an entertaining and lighthearted portrayal of the war.
In Odor-Able Kitty, Pepe Le Pew falls in love with a cat who accidentally gets black paint dumped on her, making her smell like a skunk.
Pepe le Pew arrives in New Orleans, where Fabrette the black cat has been cursed with white stripes like a skunk, interfering with her chances to get married. Of course, a skunk is her perfect match... if she can stand the smell!
The gang decides to go camping with a little bear hunting on the side. A pair of poachers decides to try and scare them off with a gorilla suit but the gang decides to try and capture the gorilla instead.
Horses' Collars is a comedy western short film from 1935. The story revolves around a saloon, slapstick comedy, and a series of comedic antics involving various characters such as a barber, bartender, gambler, gang leader, and saloon girl. The film is filled with deception, violence, and trickery in the Old West setting, with a dash of singing and dancing. It showcases the wild and lawless nature of the time, with scenes of gunfights, held at gunpoint, and the pursuit of vindication. The story also features humorous elements like a mouse causing chaos in the saloon and characters chewing tobacco and spitting in a spittoon. Don't miss the hilarity that ensues along with safecracking, cheese, a cappella singing, pickpocketing, and a suspenseful finale. Horses' Collars is sure to entertain with its timeless comedy and memorable characters.
Stan plays a waiter at a crappy restaurant and frankly such fare was better done by Chaplin and others. However, in two cute scenes, the film shines. The first is a Limburger cheese bit that is low-brow but funny. The second is the final scene with dogs following Stan at the end.
The kids' adopted grandma decides to sell her store, but can't decide whom to sell it to. The kids try to help her out.
Another Van Beuren's mouse cartoon variation of Aladdin's lamp, with a soundtrack added in the late 1940s.
Porky Pig owns a bakery. Enter a bee and a fly.
Mutt has been appointed the judge at a dog show. He persuades Jeff to dress in a dog costume and they will split the prize money.
Porky has a particularly menacing mouse in his house; after his traps, and an increasingly nasty set of cats all fail, Porky builds a robot cat. This cat proves to be a much bigger challenge for the mouse, who ultimately builds a robot mouse packed with explosives.
Farm Foolery shows farm animals harvesting crops at harvest time in the fall. The second half of the cartoon includes a sing along of the Tin Pan Alley standard "Shine on Harvest Moon" by Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth.
Little Cheeser and his friends, inspired by Buck Rogers (and visions of cheese), build a rocket ship and fly to the moon.
Si Jenks and Bob Carney go to one of those colleges where there are no classes -- although there is one befuddled, elderly professor who shows up for thirty seconds -- but there is lots of dancing, ukulele-playing, upper class men tormenting freshmen, and competition over Sally Starr, who seems to be the only student less than 30 years old.
Two families who are always fighting in the neighborhood, make up and go camping together causing havoc wherever they pass.
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