The only thing worse than being the assistant to a high-maintenance movie star who doesn't take you seriously? Finding out he's smitten with your mom.
Three brothers, Peter, Francis, and Jack, travel across India by train to reconcile and bond with each other after their father's death. The journey is filled with personal struggles, conflicts, and unexpected events that test their trust and push them to confront their past. As they navigate through the beautiful landscapes of India, they slowly open up to each other and rediscover the importance of family and brotherhood.
A former US Intelligence Agent assembles a team of mercenaries to steal a mysterious package wanted by the Irish and the Russians. They plan an ambush on a heavily-armed convoy and successfully obtain the case, only to discover that it has been switched with a decoy that explodes. The team must now locate and capture the traitor while being pursued by the Russians. In a final confrontation, they manage to retrieve the case, but at a great cost. Ultimately, a peace agreement is reached between Sinn Féin and the British, and the main character drives off with his CIA contact.
Marvelous, a teenage delinquent, struggling with grief after the death of her mother, forms an unlikely bond with a magician named Black Hole. Together, they navigate through their troubled pasts and help each other find healing and hope.
Tom and Jerry try to get some sleep but their noisy shenanigans keep them and their owner awake. Chaos ensues as they try to outsmart each other.
The birth of Baby Huey! The headlines in "Barnyard Eggstra" read: "Duck Lays Huge Egg. Mother Eggcited. Egg To Be Named Huey." A fox steals the giant egg and escapes with it. When he uses a hammer to crack the egg, Baby Huey is hatched. The fox tries to cook the king-size duckling. Huey mistakes the fox for his mommy and thinks that he's just trying to give him a bath. He chases the fox, thinking that the fox is his mother and trying to escape him. In tears, his mother shows up with a milk bottle. Baby Huey is overjoyed: "I'm the luckiest duck in the world, I've got two mothers."
Paul Parrott plays an obsessive-compulsive bill poster in this thoroughly average Hal Roach comedy from 1923. Hired to help publicize a new Gloria Snootful picture, Paul goes bonkers with glue and paper and ends up attaching promotional material to any surface within his reach, including the rear ends of a number of people, though his attempt to nail a poster to a glass window is somewhat less successful.
Poodles Hanneford comedy produced and distributed by the Weiss Brothers.
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