After witnessing a tragic accident, a man becomes the target of an obsessed stranger who believes they share a connection. As the stalker's behavior escalates, the man's life begins to unravel, and he must confront his own demons to protect himself and those he loves.
Tom and Jerry, the famous cartoon characters, stowaway on a cruise ship and cause chaos with their comic-violence antics. They flatten themselves, chase each other with dynamite, and even surf on a diving board. The ship's captain and the crew try to stop them, but their attempts are in vain. The film also includes a film-within-a-film, where Tom and Jerry play the roles of a cowboy and a lasso-wielding cat.
Little Bobo the Elephant decides to leave a jungle, where he is assigned to the thankless task of moving logs with his trunk, for a glamorous life in a circus in America. On the advice of a minah bird, Bobo paints himself pink to gain access to a ship bound for the U.S., because nobody on the ship will admit to seeing a pink elephant much less act to remove the presumed hallucination. After Bobo arrives in America, a steet-cleaner washes his pink color away, and people are now willing to acknowledge seeing the little elephant. Bobo is arrested by the police and chained for trial by judge, and the judge sentences him to life - in a circus, where he is bat "boy" for the big top baseball team, and laments that he's carrying logs (i.e. bats) yet again!
Dramatic Universal newsreel footage of the Hindenburg disaster which took place on Thursday, May 6, 1937, when the German passenger airship LZ 129 Hindenburg caught fire and was destroyed during its attempt to dock with its mooring mast at the Lakehurst Naval Air Station, New Jersey. Of the 97 people on board (36 passengers, 61 crew), there were 35 fatalities; there was also one death among the ground crew. The actual cause of the fire remains unknown, although a variety of hypotheses have been put forward for both the cause of ignition and the initial fuel for the ensuing fire. The incident shattered public confidence in the giant, passenger-carrying rigid airship and marked the end of the airship era.
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