The Boxing Cats (Prof. Welton's) (1894) (1894). Kitties put on the gloves. See also: The Boxing Cats (Prof. Welton's) (1894) (1898). Judging from the title, it's more of the same.
Glenroy Bros., No. 2 (1894) (1894). The Glenroy Brothers perform part of their vaudeville act, which includes a comic boxing scene.
The Knockout (1914) (1914). Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle is the comedian in the ring. Charlie Chaplin has a cameo as the referee.
The Champion (1915) (1915). The Little Tramp (Charles Chaplin) wins a fight with a horseshoe in his glove; but there's another battle yet.
The Champeen (1923) (1923). "Our Gang" pic with Mickey Daniels and Jackie Condon as the fighters, Sunshine Sammy (Ernest Morrison) as the fight promoter.
American Pluck (1925) (1925). Blaze Derringer (George Walsh) is supposed to be a ringer, but unexpectedly scores a knockout.
Battling Butler (1926) (1926). Buster Keaton is an effete playboy who becomes an inept boxer.
The Battle of the Century (1927) (1927). Before the famous pie fight, Stan (Stan Laurel) fights a battle in the ring. Ollie (Oliver Hardy) is his trainer.
Boxing Gloves (1929) (1929). Another "Our Gang" picture, with the two fat kids (Joe Cobb and Norman 'Chubby' Chaney) in the ring.
Brats (1930) (1930). Laurel and Hardy (Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy) play their own mischievous sons whose troublemaking includes an impromptu boxing match.
Flying Fists (1930) (1930). Flip the Frog boxes a turtle; a parrot is the referee.
City Lights (1931) (1931). The Little Tramp (Charles Chaplin) finds himself in the ring with a boxer he didn't count on.
Battling Bosko (1932) (1932 Feb. 6). Plucky little Bosko battles the enormous brute, Gas House Harry. But don't root for the underdog this time.
Any Old Port! (1932) (1932 March 5). Stan (Stan Laurel) fights a hotel owner with a grudge against him and Ollie (Oliver Hardy).
Let's You and Him Fight (1934) (1934 Feb. 16). Popeye challenges Bluto. Olive Oyl provides the last-minute spinach.
Goofy Movies Number Four (1934) (1934 May 5). Two monkeys - Mike Flatfoot, the Battling Bum from Boston, and "Punch-Drunk" Abe O'Brien from Brooklyn - battle it out.
Mickey's Mechanical Man (1933) (1934 June 17). Mickey Mouse builds a robot to compete in the boxing ring with an ape.
Punch Drunks (1934) (1934 July 13). Three Stooges short, with Curly Howard finding that he has hidden boxing talent every time he hears "Pop Goes the Weasel."
Cock o' the Walk (1935) (1935). A Silly Symphony: the title cock arrives in town with a portable boxing ring.
The Country Mouse (1935) (1935). A Merrie Melody: a mouse gets into the ring; his granny tries to stop him.
The Milky Way (1936) (1936). A timid milkman (Harold Lloyd) fights the champ.
Never Kick a Woman (1936) (1936). Popeye teaches Olive Oyl how to box.
Toby Tortoise Returns (1936) (1936). Max Hare boxes Toby Tortoise.
Glove Taps (1937) (1937). Still another "Our Gang" short, with Carl 'Alfalfa' Switzer and Tommy Bond battling it out.
Count Me Out (1938) (1938). Egghead takes a boxing correspondence course.
The Honduras Hurricane (1938) (1938). The cheating champion rooster boxes a violent baby eagle in this "Captain and the Kids" cartoon.
The Little Bantamweight (1938) (1938). A runt of a rooster becomes a champion boxer in this Harman-Ising cartoon.
Porky & Daffy (1938) (1938). Daffy Duck boxes a rooster; Porky Pig is Daffy's manager.
Dangerous Dan McFoo (1939) (1939). The title dog fights for his girl in this gag-filled Tex Avery cartoon.
Slapsie Maxie's (1939) (1939). A reluctant waiter fights the champ.
Wedding Belts (1940) (1940 July 5). In the stone age, the bride and groom fought in a boxing ring.
Way Back When a Razzberry Was a Fruit (1940) (1940 July 26). Two cavemen get in the ring, but the spectators do all the fighting.
The Art of Self Defense (1941) (1941). Goofy teaches us how to box.
Buck Privates (1941) (1941). Herbie (Lou Costello) is an army private who fights an enormous brute.
Hop and Go (1943) (1943). A dumb but arrogant kangaroo becomes a boxer in this Warner Bros. cartoon directed by Norm McCabe.
To Duck... or Not to Duck (1943) (1943). Daffy Duck goads Elmer Fudd into the ring with him.
The Kid from Brooklyn (1946) (1946). A remake of The Milky Way (1936) (see above), with Danny Kaye as the timid milkman.
Mr. Hex (1946) (1946). Slip (Leo Gorcey) gives Sach (Huntz Hall) a post-hypnotic suggestion that turns him into a champion prizefighter.
Fright Night (1947) (1947). The Three Stooges train a fighter named "Chopper" but discover that if he wins ... they die. See also: Fling in the Ring (1955) (1955)
Blondie's Reward (1948) (1948). Dagwood Bumstead boxes the son of a client.
Rabbit Punch (1948) (1948). Bugs Bunny heckles the champ, then finds himself in the ring with him.
Blondie's Big Deal (1949) (1949). Dagwood Bumstead teaches little Rollo to box, but winds up with a shiner.
Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet the Invisible Man (1951) (1951). Lou (Lou Costello) gets in the ring, but an invisible boxer is there to help him.
Punch and Judo (1951) (1951). Orphans watch Popeye on TV battling the champ. Popeye is about to lose the fight when the orphans, ignoring the barrier between watcher and watchee, feed him spinach through the screen.
Sock a Doodle Do (1952) (1952). A prize-fighting rooster punches everything in sight when he hears a bell. Foghorn Leghorn makes use of him in his on-going battle with the dog.
Punch and Judo (1951) (1951). Orphans watch Popeye on TV battling the champ. Popeye is about to lose the fight when the orphans, ignoring the barrier between watcher and watchee, feed him spinach through the screen.
Canvas Back Duck (1953) (1953). Donald Duck fights Peewee Pete; Huey, Duey and Louie are there to help.
From A to Z-Z-Z-Z (1953) (1953). A schoolboy daydreams of being a champion boxer among other things in this Chuck Jones cartoon.
Out to Punch (1956) (1956). Popeye and Bluto are in the ring again.
Mother Was a Rooster (1962) (1962). Foghorn Leghorn boxes his arch-nemesis, the dog.
Let's Do It Again (1975) (1975). Two con men (Bill Cosby and Sidney Poitier) hypnotize a scrawny weakling (Jimmie 'JJ' Walker) into becoming a champion boxer.
Every Which Way But Loose (1978) (1978). Phil (Clint Eastwood) is a bare-knuckles fighter with an orangutan for a sidekick. See also: Any Which Way You Can (1980) (1980)
Matilda (1978) (1978). Live-action kiddie flick about a boxing kangaroo.
Movie Movie (1978) (1978). The second half is a parody of the boxing flick Kid Galahad (1937) (1937)
The Prize Fighter (1979) (1979). Tim Conway is a clumsy boxer; Don Knotts is his manager.
The Girl Who Was Death (1968) (1980). In this spy parody (a unique episode in this usually somber series), Number Six (Patrick McGoohan) finds himself in a ludicrous boxing match.
Jack Goes the Distance (1983) (1983). Jack Tripper (John Ritter) is a professional chef who winds up in the ring.
Meatballs Part II (1984) (1984). Two boys' camps have a boxing match to determine the fate of both.
Teen Wolf Too (1987) (1987). A teenage werewolf gets in the ring.
"The Grudge Match (1991)" (1991) TV series. Pairs of real-life enemies duke it out in the ring encumbered by wacky rules and props.
The Mouse (1996) (1996). Boxing's most lovable loser is profiled in this documentary.
Crust (2003) (2001). A pub owner teaches a giant shrimp how to box.
Celebrity Boxing (2002) (2002). Real-life has-been celebrities box one another. See also: Celebrity Boxing 2 (2002) (2002).
Bad Santa (2003) (2003). A dwarf boxes a fat boy.
Glenroy Bros., No. 2 (1894) (1894). The Glenroy Brothers perform part of their vaudeville act, which includes a comic boxing scene.
The Knockout (1914) (1914). Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle is the comedian in the ring. Charlie Chaplin has a cameo as the referee.
The Champion (1915) (1915). The Little Tramp (Charles Chaplin) wins a fight with a horseshoe in his glove; but there's another battle yet.
The Champeen (1923) (1923). "Our Gang" pic with Mickey Daniels and Jackie Condon as the fighters, Sunshine Sammy (Ernest Morrison) as the fight promoter.
American Pluck (1925) (1925). Blaze Derringer (George Walsh) is supposed to be a ringer, but unexpectedly scores a knockout.
Battling Butler (1926) (1926). Buster Keaton is an effete playboy who becomes an inept boxer.
The Battle of the Century (1927) (1927). Before the famous pie fight, Stan (Stan Laurel) fights a battle in the ring. Ollie (Oliver Hardy) is his trainer.
Boxing Gloves (1929) (1929). Another "Our Gang" picture, with the two fat kids (Joe Cobb and Norman 'Chubby' Chaney) in the ring.
Brats (1930) (1930). Laurel and Hardy (Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy) play their own mischievous sons whose troublemaking includes an impromptu boxing match.
Flying Fists (1930) (1930). Flip the Frog boxes a turtle; a parrot is the referee.
City Lights (1931) (1931). The Little Tramp (Charles Chaplin) finds himself in the ring with a boxer he didn't count on.
Battling Bosko (1932) (1932 Feb. 6). Plucky little Bosko battles the enormous brute, Gas House Harry. But don't root for the underdog this time.
Any Old Port! (1932) (1932 March 5). Stan (Stan Laurel) fights a hotel owner with a grudge against him and Ollie (Oliver Hardy).
Let's You and Him Fight (1934) (1934 Feb. 16). Popeye challenges Bluto. Olive Oyl provides the last-minute spinach.
Goofy Movies Number Four (1934) (1934 May 5). Two monkeys - Mike Flatfoot, the Battling Bum from Boston, and "Punch-Drunk" Abe O'Brien from Brooklyn - battle it out.
Mickey's Mechanical Man (1933) (1934 June 17). Mickey Mouse builds a robot to compete in the boxing ring with an ape.
Punch Drunks (1934) (1934 July 13). Three Stooges short, with Curly Howard finding that he has hidden boxing talent every time he hears "Pop Goes the Weasel."
Cock o' the Walk (1935) (1935). A Silly Symphony: the title cock arrives in town with a portable boxing ring.
The Country Mouse (1935) (1935). A Merrie Melody: a mouse gets into the ring; his granny tries to stop him.
The Milky Way (1936) (1936). A timid milkman (Harold Lloyd) fights the champ.
Never Kick a Woman (1936) (1936). Popeye teaches Olive Oyl how to box.
Toby Tortoise Returns (1936) (1936). Max Hare boxes Toby Tortoise.
Glove Taps (1937) (1937). Still another "Our Gang" short, with Carl 'Alfalfa' Switzer and Tommy Bond battling it out.
Count Me Out (1938) (1938). Egghead takes a boxing correspondence course.
The Honduras Hurricane (1938) (1938). The cheating champion rooster boxes a violent baby eagle in this "Captain and the Kids" cartoon.
The Little Bantamweight (1938) (1938). A runt of a rooster becomes a champion boxer in this Harman-Ising cartoon.
Porky & Daffy (1938) (1938). Daffy Duck boxes a rooster; Porky Pig is Daffy's manager.
Dangerous Dan McFoo (1939) (1939). The title dog fights for his girl in this gag-filled Tex Avery cartoon.
Slapsie Maxie's (1939) (1939). A reluctant waiter fights the champ.
Wedding Belts (1940) (1940 July 5). In the stone age, the bride and groom fought in a boxing ring.
Way Back When a Razzberry Was a Fruit (1940) (1940 July 26). Two cavemen get in the ring, but the spectators do all the fighting.
The Art of Self Defense (1941) (1941). Goofy teaches us how to box.
Buck Privates (1941) (1941). Herbie (Lou Costello) is an army private who fights an enormous brute.
Hop and Go (1943) (1943). A dumb but arrogant kangaroo becomes a boxer in this Warner Bros. cartoon directed by Norm McCabe.
To Duck... or Not to Duck (1943) (1943). Daffy Duck goads Elmer Fudd into the ring with him.
The Kid from Brooklyn (1946) (1946). A remake of The Milky Way (1936) (see above), with Danny Kaye as the timid milkman.
Mr. Hex (1946) (1946). Slip (Leo Gorcey) gives Sach (Huntz Hall) a post-hypnotic suggestion that turns him into a champion prizefighter.
Fright Night (1947) (1947). The Three Stooges train a fighter named "Chopper" but discover that if he wins ... they die. See also: Fling in the Ring (1955) (1955)
Blondie's Reward (1948) (1948). Dagwood Bumstead boxes the son of a client.
Rabbit Punch (1948) (1948). Bugs Bunny heckles the champ, then finds himself in the ring with him.
Blondie's Big Deal (1949) (1949). Dagwood Bumstead teaches little Rollo to box, but winds up with a shiner.
Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet the Invisible Man (1951) (1951). Lou (Lou Costello) gets in the ring, but an invisible boxer is there to help him.
Punch and Judo (1951) (1951). Orphans watch Popeye on TV battling the champ. Popeye is about to lose the fight when the orphans, ignoring the barrier between watcher and watchee, feed him spinach through the screen.
Sock a Doodle Do (1952) (1952). A prize-fighting rooster punches everything in sight when he hears a bell. Foghorn Leghorn makes use of him in his on-going battle with the dog.
Punch and Judo (1951) (1951). Orphans watch Popeye on TV battling the champ. Popeye is about to lose the fight when the orphans, ignoring the barrier between watcher and watchee, feed him spinach through the screen.
Canvas Back Duck (1953) (1953). Donald Duck fights Peewee Pete; Huey, Duey and Louie are there to help.
From A to Z-Z-Z-Z (1953) (1953). A schoolboy daydreams of being a champion boxer among other things in this Chuck Jones cartoon.
Out to Punch (1956) (1956). Popeye and Bluto are in the ring again.
Mother Was a Rooster (1962) (1962). Foghorn Leghorn boxes his arch-nemesis, the dog.
Let's Do It Again (1975) (1975). Two con men (Bill Cosby and Sidney Poitier) hypnotize a scrawny weakling (Jimmie 'JJ' Walker) into becoming a champion boxer.
Every Which Way But Loose (1978) (1978). Phil (Clint Eastwood) is a bare-knuckles fighter with an orangutan for a sidekick. See also: Any Which Way You Can (1980) (1980)
Matilda (1978) (1978). Live-action kiddie flick about a boxing kangaroo.
Movie Movie (1978) (1978). The second half is a parody of the boxing flick Kid Galahad (1937) (1937)
The Prize Fighter (1979) (1979). Tim Conway is a clumsy boxer; Don Knotts is his manager.
The Girl Who Was Death (1968) (1980). In this spy parody (a unique episode in this usually somber series), Number Six (Patrick McGoohan) finds himself in a ludicrous boxing match.
Jack Goes the Distance (1983) (1983). Jack Tripper (John Ritter) is a professional chef who winds up in the ring.
Meatballs Part II (1984) (1984). Two boys' camps have a boxing match to determine the fate of both.
Teen Wolf Too (1987) (1987). A teenage werewolf gets in the ring.
"The Grudge Match (1991)" (1991) TV series. Pairs of real-life enemies duke it out in the ring encumbered by wacky rules and props.
The Mouse (1996) (1996). Boxing's most lovable loser is profiled in this documentary.
Crust (2003) (2001). A pub owner teaches a giant shrimp how to box.
Celebrity Boxing (2002) (2002). Real-life has-been celebrities box one another. See also: Celebrity Boxing 2 (2002) (2002).
Bad Santa (2003) (2003). A dwarf boxes a fat boy.
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- How long is Battling Butler?1 hour and 17 minutes
- When was Battling Butler released?September 19, 1926
- What is the IMDb rating of Battling Butler?7 out of 10
- Who stars in Battling Butler?
- Who wrote Battling Butler?
- Who directed Battling Butler?
- Who was the composer for Battling Butler?
- Who was the producer of Battling Butler?
- Who was the executive producer of Battling Butler?
- Who was the cinematographer for Battling Butler?
- Who are the characters in Battling Butler?The mountain girl and Her Brother
- What is the plot of Battling Butler?A love-struck weakling must pretend to be boxer in order to gain respect from the family of the girl he loves.
- How much did Battling Butler earn at the US box office?$702,000
- What is Battling Butler rated?TV-G
- What genre is Battling Butler?Comedy and Sports
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