Two New Yorkers, Bill and Stan, are accused of murder in rural Alabama. They call upon Bill's cousin, Vinny, a brash lawyer with no trial experience, for help. Despite his lack of expertise, Vinny takes on the case and must navigate the unfamiliar courtroom procedures. Through his aggressive questioning and the help of his fiancée, Mona Lisa, who has expertise in automobiles, Vinny is able to disprove the evidence against Bill and Stan. In the end, Vinny earns the respect of his clients and the judge as he successfully defends them and solves the case.
Safety Last! is a silent comedy film released in 1923. The story follows a young man seeking a job who ends up climbing the outside of a department store building as part of a publicity stunt. Along the way, he faces numerous obstacles and comedic mishaps. The film is known for its iconic image of the protagonist hanging from a clock on the side of the building.
Mickey Mouse attempts to construct a building, but encounters problems such as falling from height, stealing food, and battling against Pegleg Pete.
In Lonesome, two lonely individuals visit the carnival and, by chance, meet and fall in love. They enjoy a day of fun and excitement together, experiencing the thrill of the rides and the joy of each other's company. As the day comes to an end, they are separated but desperately search for each other, eventually reuniting and realizing the depth of their connection.
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.
A cartoonist falls asleep at the drawing board and into the clutches of his own villains, until Beans the Cat comes to the rescue.
Olive Oyl, a regular Rosie the Riveter, receives a blow to the head from a swinging grappling hook, sending her into a sleepwalking state. Popeye and Bluto, two rival factory workers, fight each other for privilege of saving her life.
Happy-Go-Nutty is a surrealistic animated comedy short film from 1944. The plot revolves around a nutty squirrel who ends up in various absurd situations, including escaping from an insane asylum.
Fired for messing up an important contract, Dagwood takes a job as a manual laborer for a construction firm while trying to get his old job back.
Harry and his friend have planned to go out for an afternoon of fun. But first, Harry must figure out how to slip away from his domineering wife with some money to spend...
Olive is going shopping and drops Swee'pea off for Popeye to watch. Popeye carves a sailboat for him, but the tyke spots Popeye's battleship, and the puny toy boat will no longer do. He climbs aboard, and there's the expected mayhem. Notable sequences include a stint on the ship's cannon's control board, with Popeye caught on the barrel, then in the gears; also, at the end, Swee'Pea hitches a ride atop a torpedo just as Olive is returning and Popeye's out cold.
“Riggs’s film poem conveys delight with his adopted hometown through a documentarian’s eye for significant detail, a lyrical sensitivity, and homespun humor. The film, too, serves as a chronicle of people and places of Santa Fe in the early 1930s, when it earned the epithet ‘Greenwich Village of the West.’” - William M. Butler
Oswald the Rabbit is a WWI private charged with delivering a letter to the western front.
Benchley tries his best to demonstrate the routine one should follow to start the day right.
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