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Derby Day (1922)
Character: N/A
Very hungry Monty chases a garbage truck all around town to retrieve a box lunch thrown away by a picky young lady.
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Pay or Move (1924)
Character: Monty
Monty is trying to collect rent from a couple of tough deadbeats who have made a sport of beating rent collectors.
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One Night Only (1919)
Character: N/A
Misadventures of a traveling company of actors performing for one night in a small town. When the troupe's leading lady deserts the show for a better paying job as a waitress, a young woman from the town gets the role for one night.
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Coppers and Scents (1919)
Character: Sherlock McNutt
Monty Banks plays Sherlock McNutt in this Charley Chase short. Partially lost; five minutes survive.
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Her First False Hare (1919)
Character: Unnamed
Four men are out rabbit hunting and encounter a beautiful young lady, who promises to marry the first one who brings her a white rabbit.
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The Purple Mask (1916)
Character: Jack Elliot & Jacques, Patricia's Butler (as Mario Bianchi)
Cunard turns into The Queen of the Apaches, an outlaw who steals from the rich to gives to the poor, always leaving a purple mask behind as a trademark.
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Man of the Moment (1935)
Character: Doctor
Love blossoms after a young man rescues a pretty girl who attempted to drown herself.
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Wedding Bells (1924)
Character: The Groom
Monty Banks plays a groom who is about to get married. In fact, he has the marriage license just about in hand. Apparently, he's had a bachelor party the night before and when his fiancée rings him, he can't find the phone, but there's several other guys sleeping it off. The landlady suspects that some hijinks have gone on and looks to investigate. Monty figures things out pretty quickly. Luckily for him, one of the gentlemen sleeping it off is in a policeman's uniform and Monty has him pretend he's arrested everybody in the room.
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Ça, c'est du cinéma (1951)
Character: (archive footage)
Laurel is a Scottish reporter suspected of being a spy by police detective James Finlayson. Although trailed by the latter, Stan, who is reporting on the movie world, manages to be hired by Mack Sennett. He makes his debut in Nevada, in the middle of gold diggers. After managing to clear his name he becomes, with Oliver Hardy, a big comedy star.
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A Scrap of Paper (1918)
Character: Soldier
Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle confronts the Kaiser in his headquarters, and tells him that he will be be defeated by "scraps of paper," i.e. War Bonds.
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Olympic Honeymoon (1940)
Character: Orban
Comedy set in Switzerland. An estranged honeymooner, mistaken for an ice- hockey champion, helps England to win an international ice hockey match.
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Oils Well! (1923)
Character: Monty, the Office Force
Set in the oil-soaked country of “Chilitina”—shot on location in San Diego’s Balboa Park—Oils Well! follows the travails of Monty, an everyman office clerk, who thinks only of his boss’s daughter. When Herbert Hester, an oilman “so crooked he cheats when counting his pulse,” schemes to cover up the company’s new gusher so he can claim it himself and get the girl, Monty swings into action. He eludes the hapless Chilitinan army, sidesteps the General’s amorous wife, thwarts Herbert, and saves the day.
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Hot Sands (1924)
Character: N/A
Monty Banks finds love and mischief at the amusement park, in this two-reel comedy
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The Compulsory Husband (1929)
Character: Monty
A recently engaged girl invites her parents to meet her fiance. They learn that he also loves another woman.
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Week-End Wives (1929)
Character: Max Ammon
A lawyer spends the weekend with a married actress at the same hotel as his wife and her lover. This British silent film exists in an abridged 2-reel (32-min) format.
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Adam's Apple (1928)
Character: Monty Adams
An American on his honeymoon in Paris, organises the kidnapping of his interfering mother-in-law.
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So You Won't Talk (1935)
Character: Tony
The owner of a small Italian restaurant in central London is left a million pound inheritance, the only stipulation to the will being that he cannot speak or write anything for a period of one month.
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Taxi Please (1923)
Character: The Taxi Driver
A wild taxi driver can't get ahead with his fares but he is still willing to help his sweetheart at the drugstore, especially when he figures out how to sell hair tonic
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The Belles of Liberty (1918)
Character: Harold Hatband (Son) as Frenchie Bianchi
Monty Banks plays a paramour who starts all sort of silly highjinks with Eva Novak and Carolyne Wright
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Horse Shoes (1927)
Character: Monty Milde
A Monty Banks comedy that includes the 'Undressing in the Upper Berth' routine
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Too Much Johnson (1919)
Character: Leon Dathis
Augustus Billings has a domineering mother-in-law, and to get away from both her and his wife, he takes a trip, claiming that he is going off to check on Mexican oil investments. But he's really going on a cruise with Mrs. Dathis, who has purchased his yacht. To throw everyone off track, he uses the name Mr. Johnson. When he decides to repeat the trip, however, all hell breaks loose -- the jealous Mr. Dathis is out to get his hands on this Johnson character, while a real Mr. Johnson shows up in Mexico, and Mrs. Billings shows up with her mother, and the confusion continues from there.
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Did She Do Wrong? (1918)
Character: N/A
An industrious criminal plays his game so crookedly that he "double crosses" himself.
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Falling in Love (1934)
Character: Film Director
British comedy. It was released in the United States the following year under the alternative title Trouble Ahead.
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Play Safe (1927)
Character: The Boy
A gang of bad guys menace a feller's gal. She hides in a freight car and a misstep sends the otherwise-empty train out of the station with the lever pushed to full speed. As the train gains speed, the captive's boyfriend must board the runaway train, repel the pursing gang, get his girl out of the box car, and somehow get the two of them to safety. Tunnels, a water tower, a steep grade, and a frayed rope complicate the hero's task.
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The Head Waiter (1919)
Character: Dinning Customer
The headwaiter does tricks with spaghetti that the greatest spaghetti handlers in the world never heard of. The sight makes your mouth water. Besides food, the scenes are garnished with a couple of trayfuls of beautiful girls.
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A Blind Pig (1918)
Character: French Salesman
A French perfume salesman is mistaken for a bootlegger. Partially missing two-reeler with 11 minutes surviving.
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A Flivver Wedding (1920)
Character: The Boy
The misadventures of a young man who sets out in his flivver to stop the girl he loves from being forcibly married to a rival.
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Cleaned and Dry (1921)
Character: The Dry Cleaner Delivery Wagon Driver
Monty is the driver of a delivery wagon for a cleaning and dyeing establishment, romps with a Ford and gets himself into many ridiculous scrapes.
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Paging Love (1923)
Character: The Encyclopedia Salesman
Monty appears as a chap whose prospective father-in-law, to find out the stuff of which he is made, sets him out to peddle an encyclopedia which no one else can sell.
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Home Cooking (1924)
Character: N/A
A new bridegroom discovers his wife's astounding ability to create culinary disasters.
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Elstree Story (1952)
Character: Himself
Starting in 1927 when the first film, The White Sheik, was made there, Elstree Story features excerpts from over forty productions – including Hitchcock’s Blackmail, the first feature-length British talkie ever shown – with early appearances by some of cinema’s greatest stars; it is a most memorable and evocative journey through the years.
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Chasing Choo Choos (1927)
Character: Monty
Virginia Craig will become super-wealthy and gain sole control of her factory, unless insubordinate schemers can trick her into marrying one of their clique. Unfortunately for them, she loves Monty, one of her employees. When the schemers' plot is discovered, a chase starts away from the factory and onto a runaway train.
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For the Love of Mike (1932)
Character: Chef
A useless secretary and his private detective friend try to help an heiress from being swindled by her guardian.
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The Church Mouse (1934)
Character: Harry Blump, the Window Washer (uncredited)
When a meek secretary goes to work for her new boss, she becomes a sophisticated lady.
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Atta Boy (1926)
Character: Monty Milde
Monty Milde, would-be newspaper reporter, stumbles into a high-profile kidnapping mystery.
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A Perfect Gentleman (1928)
Character: Monty Brooks
Monty Banks gets involved in tracking down a stolen fortune, his adventures culminating in a whirlwind, gag-filled climax at sea.
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Brilliantine the Bull Fighter (1922)
Character: Adolph Brilliantino
Brilliantino the Bullfighter (originally titled Flood and Sand) is one of the first spoofs of Blood and Sand, Paramount’s smoldering matador melodrama that set box offices ablaze. Like Mud and Sand, starring Stan Laurel, the Banks parody was rushed into theaters in November 1922, while memory of the Valentino vehicle was fresh. The concept of Monty Banks impersonating the passionate matador must have been innately hilarious to audiences who had seen the original picture.
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The Garage (1920)
Character: Man with Dog (uncredited)
Roscoe and Buster operate a combination garage and fire station. In the first half they destroy a car left for them to clean. In the second half they go off on a false alarm and return to find their own building on fire.
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Tonight's the Night - Pass It On (1931)
Character: Convict
Slapstick comedy in which luckless slate club treasurer Bill Smithers is sent to prison for three years after being mistakenly accused of stealing funds.
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Love (1919)
Character: Farmhand
"Fatty", a poor good hearted farm boy is deeply in love with Winifred, a farmer's daughter. A rich neighbor offers the farmer a large plot of land if Winifred marries his slow witted son Al. "Fatty" has less then one day to save heartbroken Winifred from the rushed ceremony.
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Shipyard Sally (1939)
Character: N/A
A lancashire singer buys a pub in Clydebank and hits money troubles when the shipbyards are closed. She takes a petition to London to try to get them reopened.
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Always Late (1923)
Character: N/A
Monty is chronically late. He comes to work late and loses his job, and then manages to miss his own wedding...
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Keep Smiling (1925)
Character: The Boy
The Boy, involved in a maritime disaster as a child, suffers from hydrophobia. He invents a life preserver that automatically inflates when it hits the water, using it to save the life of Rose Ryan, the daughter of a steamship magnate.
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Queen of Hearts (1936)
Character: Montague Banking
A woman prevents a popular stage performer getting arrested for drunk driving, though has to pretend to be a rich benefactor when she next meets him.
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Six A.M. (1923)
Character: N/A
After drinking all night, Monty and his friend try to get home, but it turns out to be not easy. The next day, Monty tries to win the heart of a theater actress.
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Blood and Sand (1941)
Character: Antonio Lopez
Bullfighter Juan Gallardo falls for socialite Dona Sol, turning from the faithful Carmen who nevertheless stands by her man as he continues to face real danger in the bullring.
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Camping Out (1919)
Character: N/A
Camping Out is a 1919 American short comedy film directed by and starring Fatty Arbuckle. Fatty is the suffering spouse who comes home every night to an empty house and a neglectful wife. His wife is furious when she discovers Fatty is cheating on her with a neglected wife.
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Days of Thrills and Laughter (1961)
Character: Self (archive footage)
An appreciative, uncritical look at silent film comedies and thrillers from early in the century through the 1920s.
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Leave It to Me (1933)
Character: N/A
The owner of a professional help agency poses as a poet at a wealthy patron's ball and prevents a necklace from being stolen by thieves.
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In and Out (1921)
Character: Mr. Newlywed
Monty and his wife are newlyweds dealing with things like making breakfast that’s edible and dealing with a persistent book salesman. Only reel 1 survives, so a proper plot synopsis is difficult.
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A Bell for Adano (1945)
Character: Giuseppe
Major Joppolo and his men are assigned to restore order to the war-torn Italian town of Adano. He has to manage getting supplies into town without interfering with troop movements, all the while dealing with colorful citizens of the town. One of his quests is to replace the bell which orders the town's life.
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You Made Me Love You (1933)
Character: Taxi Driver (uncredited)
A rich American businessman in London makes believe he's lost all his money so that his daughter will marry a composer.
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Where Is My Wife? (1921)
Character: The Jealous Husband
Lovable buffoon Monty Banks tries to relax, but ultimately spends his day worrying about who is keeping company with his wife.
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Don't Park Here (1919)
Character: A Rival
Not one but two of Charlie Chaplin impersonators, Harry Mann and Monty Banks, a film directed by Charley Chase still under the name of Charles Parrott. They go driving around town experiencing various car theft problems.
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Flying Luck (1927)
Character: The Boy
A naive young man joins the Army in order to become a pilot.
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Heads We Go (1933)
Character: Chauffeur
A model inherits a great deal of money and pretends to be a movie star.
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Africa F.O.B. (1925)
Character: Monty Banks, the Stranger
Monty Banks becomes a car salesman and is shifted to Africa to sell one to King Obogeegee.
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Atlantic (1929)
Character: Dandy
English-language version. "Atlantic" is a drama film based on the sinking of the RMS "Titanic" and set aboard a fictional ship, called the "Atlantic". The main plotline revolves around a man who has a shipboard affair with a fellow passenger, which is eventually discovered by his wife. The ship also has aboard an elderly couple, the Rools, who are on their anniversary cruise. Midway across the Atlantic Ocean, the "Atlantic" strikes an iceberg and is damaged to the point where it is sinking into the Atlantic.
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The Sheriff (1918)
Character: N/A
Roscoe Arbuckle plays a Douglas Fairbanks fan who becomes a rotund version of his hero. As "The Sheriff", he must rescue abducted schoolteacher Betty Compson.
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The Grocery Clerk (1919)
Character: The Tow Gusher, a 'He Vamp'
Big Ben has the largest store in the town of New Ralgia. His chief clerk is in love with the post mistress. The three of them get involved in a series of mishaps with their customers and with the town ladies' man, whose advances conceal a more sinister purpose.
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