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- An 84 minute collection of commercials, music videos and other stuff by the influential English video artist and filmmaker Chris Cunningham.
- An animator and a janitor are playing with a Ouija Board and Koko is haunted by a bunch of ghosts.
- Max Fleischer's pen drawing of a clown performs tricks with lifelike motion.
- An artist draws a dog who comes to life and eats a plate of sausages.
- McDougall Alley was in festive mood. Two of its favorites were to be married, the culmination of a childhood romance begun and nurtured through the years in the shadow of McDougall Alley. The McDougall Alley Kids were of course invited to the wedding which through the kindness of Miriam Tilford, beloved charity worker of McDougall Alley, was to be held in the beautiful Tilford mansion. Headed by "Bubbles" "Barney" and "Faye," the Alley Kid kut-ups arrived at the Tilford home, prepared to lend their share to the nuptial ceremonies with old shoes, rice and confetti. A long, winding staircase leading from the drawing room to the balcony, proved the undoing of the McDougall Alley Kids. Each of 'em employed the smooth wooden banister as an improvised slide, and not until a casualty had been reported, did they put a halt to their antics. It was when "Fatty," descending from the balcony, fell through the floor into the cellar. The wedding took place with the McDougall Alley Kids looking on from the sidelines. But the Kids were not to be outdone. Just before the ceremony was over, they stole outside, and hitched the wedding wagon to the trunk of a tree. This of course delayed the wedding party, and caused endless merriment to the kids.
- The McDougall Kids split and face each other in a war of trenches throwing objects and mud at one another. But when of their "weapons" accidentally hits and breaks a wagon filled with pies, new weapons are brought to the fight and bystanders end up being part of the game.
- Koko the Clown's little brother comes to visit and wreaks havoc in Max Fleischer's studio.
- Max sits for a portrait by an artist looking for a job, while the Inkwell Clown fights with the artist's drawing of a stereotyped Chinese character.
- Farmer Al Falfa goes to New York, money bag in hand. He is immediately spotted by a crook who dispatches a fetching lady to shake him down. At a restaurant, she gets him drunk and lays him out with knockout drops. But what's in the bag is not what she is expecting, and she flees. The now-drunken farmer has stepped dizzily outside to acquaint himself with a lamppost when another sharper steps up and hauls him into a crooked card game. While prospects do not look good for Farmer Al Falfa, he has more tricks up his sleeve than the city slickers realize.
- As a cartoonist draws a clown, a housefly harasses both the man and his pen-and-ink creation.
- Rare plagiarized version of Winsor McCay's animated short film "Gertie the Dinosaur" created by John Randolph Bray in 1915. It shows an animated dinosaur doing several shenanigans in a prehistoric natural setting.
- A little boy and his beloved puppy find themselves in and out of mischief.
- Colonel Heeza Liar goes to Africa hoping to outdo Teddy Roosevelt; there he encounters various jungle animals.
- Two rival kid gangs fight for control over the local alley where they play.
- An animated interpretation of a rocket voyage to the moon demonstrates the scientific principles at play in theoretical space travel (such as gravity).
- Dinky Doodle and Weakheart discover a hen that lays golden eggs, but also a giant ogre who's very hungry.
- A little boy and his beloved puppy find themselves in and out of mischief.
- Herr Professor Doodlepoodle, N.U.T., famed in both hemispheres, and New Jersey, after many years of earnest effort and short rations and long expectations, finally succeeds in completing the mechanical man that is more than human. This contrivance he christened "Percy." The sudden climax of his hopes and efforts was almost too much for the gentle professor. He grasps the child of his skill in both arms, inadvertently pushing many buttons at once. Now Percy works by means of buttons. By pushing the "walker button" Percy is made to walk; by shoving the "dish washer button" Percy is made to wash dishes. But the result of pressing a number of buttons, as did the professor when he impulsively threw his arms about his invention, was unknown, for a second, or a small fraction thereof. Then there was a disturbance commonly known as a "rough house," it is only term properly descriptive. The professor flies through the roof, interrupting an innocent cat who has had her eye on a sparrow luncheon. On landing he hits the roof, then Percy. As he gazes around the wreck of the shop, he realizes that he is ruined. But he has Percy. Percy shall recoup the professor's fortune. He will hire him out at a good salary, for Percy can do anything a man can do, and most of the things a woman can. They passed down a street and a sign in a dry goods emporium arrests the attention of the professor: "Window Dresser Wanted." Percy is taken inside and introduced to the manager of the store. The manager wishes a demonstration and suggests that Percy dress a dummy to prove himself fitted for the job. Percy picks up the dummy, carries it behind the screen, and emerges with the fully and tastefully dressed figure. He is a success. He is hired on the spot and the professor leaves, with the "dresser button" still working. Percy gives a few spasmodic starts, and grabs the store manager, carrying him behind the screen. Soon articles of personal wear appear from back of the screen, then an enraged and outraged manager appears. That starts the fun; the rest is a riot. Lady customers are dressed in the latest styles for men, even the clergy is not exempt. When you see the Reverend Fiddle, D.D., beating it through the various departments dressed in, but we won't give it away; we've said more than we should now.
- A little boy and his beloved puppy find themselves in and out of mischief.
- A little boy and his beloved puppy find themselves in and out of mischief.
- Two pigs steal the snobby Mrs. Hippo's new Ford and, while being pursued by the police, they hit a stone wall, fly into the air and land in a laundry. They get involved with a clothes-wringer, their tails are caught in the rollers, and they come out with corkscrew tails. In the live action, animator Walter Lantz, as he finishes the story, is being led away by the keeper of the local insane asylum.