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California or Bust (1923)
Character: The Old Settler
After their house is blown away by a twister, a farmer and his wife decide to move to California. Once over the border they're greeted by rain, hail, snow and an Indian uprising.
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It's a Gift (1923)
Character: Inventor
A group of oil magnates are trying to think of new ways to attract business. One of them suggests that they contact the inventor Pollard, who has devised a new gasoline substitute. Pollard himself lives in a home filled with his eccentric inventions. When he gets the message from the oil company, he is excited about the opportunity to demonstrate his innovation.
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The Yokel (1926)
Character: N/A
Snub comes to town with his pet duck where people think that he has struck oil at home, and so is briefly pursued by the young women, before settling on Thelma Daniels.
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The Big Shot (1929)
Character: N/A
Fat and Snub are a reporter and photographer who try to track down a reclusive Scotsman for an interview and photo.
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All Wet (1926)
Character: N/A
In this film, Snub leaves his extremely tiny town to go live with his aunt, who he doesn't even know. He arrives at her house when she's throwing a party and she doesn't want to invite him inside...until she learns he owns an oil well. Then she encourages him to meet and become smitten with her daughter. However, Snub isn't that interested in this vamp and instead is interested in the maid. But due to their persistence, Snub finally agrees to marry the cousin--at which point the maid hatches a plan to expose the ruse and a silent comedy chase ensues.
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Defective Detectives (1944)
Character: Janitor
El and Harry are two office cleaners turned detectives who are assigned to chase a gangster, but they end up catching the husband and wife they are supposed to protect from him.
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Park Your Car (1920)
Character: N/A
A once-act farce about two neighbours who purchase a car that they can use to go on drives with their wives.
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Fully Insured (1923)
Character: Our Hero
A Hal Roach comedy starring 'Snub' Pollard and James Finlayson.
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Rush Orders (1921)
Character: Marquis de Marmalade
A typical Pollard-Morrison outing is Rush Orders (1921), in which the pair ride into town on a railroad handcar (with Morrison providing the locomotive muscle). When there it's all about the hustle for food with rivals and advertisement in the café business..
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Fifteen Minutes (1921)
Character: The Husband
While his wife is shopping, Snub attempts to take a fifteen minute break.
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No Kidding (1928)
Character: N/A
Snub and Loback try to hide a baby they’re watching from their landlord.
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The Earl of Chicago (1940)
Character: Townsman (uncredited)
A behind the times Chicago bootlegger goes to England with his lawyer to claim his estate as the Earl of Gorley.
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White Legion (1936)
Character: Baker
In the early 1900s, as the Panama Canal is being built, a group of doctors try to discover a cure for yellow fever, a disease that is decimating the workers constructing the canal.
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Pay Your Dues (1919)
Character: N/A
While blindfolded and playing pin the tail on the donkey with some lady friends, our hero is mistaken for an escaped initiate of a kooky fraternal order.
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Spring Fever (1919)
Character: The Unwelcome Suitor
Harold is a bookkeeper who works in an office but can't keep his mind on his job -- the spring weather is too nice to stay indoors. After escaping from his office he romps in the park instead.
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That's Him (1918)
Character: N/A
Our newlywed hero is about to embark on a journey when he realizes that he has lost the train tickets. A crook knocks him down and switches clothes with him. The assailant's victims pursue our man while his bride is led to believe that she has been deserted.
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Are Crooks Dishonest? (1918)
Character: Snub
Con artists Harold and Snub attempt to outwit phony psychic Miss Goulash and her "professor" father.
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Move On (1917)
Character: N/A
Our hero is a police officer who gets involved in a crap game, flirting with a nurse and other amusements.
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We Never Sleep (1917)
Character: N/A
Luke is an inept detective who follows the wrong man to a seaside hotel.
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All Aboard (1917)
Character: Passenger with trunk
In order to get his daughter away from her suitors, her father decides to spirit her away to Bermuda. Our hero, however, stows away on the ship. When discovered, he is credited with catching a crook, thus winning a reward and the girl.
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The Flirt (1917)
Character: N/A
A man takes a job in a café, hoping to get to know the pretty waitress working there.
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Rainbow Island (1917)
Character: N/A
After finding a note in a floating bottle, our hero is off to resue the heroine. He runs into a tribe of cannibals.
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Lonesome Luke on Tin Can Alley (1917)
Character: Cafe Waiter
Luke is a pickpocket, hiding out from the cops in a dive in the slum part of town. He later winds up in a boxing match which again brings the law on his tail.
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Luke, Patient Provider (1916)
Character: N/A
When a doctor is forced, because of a lack of patients, to dismiss his pretty nurse, Luke comes to the rescue and uses his flivver to supply a ready supply of accident cases.
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Luke, Crystal Gazer (1916)
Character: N/A
Luke happens into a spiritualist's shop where he is smitten by her daughter. He decides to stick around and take a job there.
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Gents in a Jam (1952)
Character: Telegram Deliverer (uncredited)
Shemp's rich Uncle Phineas comes to visit the stooges who are broke and about to evicted. The boys convince their landlady Mrs. McGruder not to toss them out as Shemp is set to inherit a fortune. The boys also have trouble with a circus strongman after Shemp accidentally rips off his wife's dress. Uncle Phineas gets in the middle of the fight, and Mrs. McGruder ends it by knocking out the strongman. It turns out that Uncle Phineas and the landlady were childhood sweethearts and he marries her, leaving the stooges out of the bucks once again.
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Luke's Movie Muddle (1916)
Character: Projectionist
Lonesome Luke has a movie theater and also works the box office and as an usher. He has to put up with, among other things, an incompetent projectionist who falls asleep all the time. Complications ensue.
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Luke Joins the Navy (1916)
Character: N/A
The beginning of the film you find Harold Lloyd playing his "Lonesome Luke" character. Out of the blue, Lloyd decides he's going to join the navy and you really wonder if part of the film leading to it is missing. After all, the decision seemed to come from no where and why Snub Pollard would also join is unclear. And, oddly, they seem to skip all training and are stationed on a navy ship. Soon Pollard's wife comes to the boat looking for him and she's put off the boat as the movie ends very, very anticlimactically.
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A Sammy in Siberia (1919)
Character: Count Pop-up-skyvitch - the Bolshevik Officer (as Harry Pollard)
A bumbling American soldier saves a girl from a bunch of Cossacks.
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Next Aisle Over (1919)
Character: The Henpecked Husband (as Harry Pollard)
A salesman takes a job at a department store to impress a girl and winds up stopping a kidnapping.
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The Floor Below (1919)
Character: N/A
Snub Pollard and his friend are clearly under their wives thumbs. But his grandfather turns up and tells them to assert themselves, which they do. Her father is not impressed.
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Looking for Trouble (1919)
Character: The Dandy
Snub plays a rich guy who wants to impress the ladies with his virility. So he pays a tough boxer to take a dive in a staged fight, though the fight definitely does not go anything like expected.
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The Dippy Dentist (1920)
Character: The Dandy
The film begins with a girl who is supposedly irresistible to all men. Several guys all come to her to pledge their undying love--including Harold Lloyd's brother, Gaylord (who is a dentist). Shortly after this, a new dentist (Snub Pollard) arrives to work in an office across the hall. In a very funny scene, Pollard manages to steal all of Gaylord's patients from his waiting room. However, when it comes to dental work, Snub is highly unlikely to receive the American Dental Association's seal of approval. That's because he's incredibly rough and manages to toss a guy out the window when he pulls his tooth.
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At the Ringside (1921)
Character: N/A
"At the Ringside" is filmed in a "slum" which is rather obviously a studio mock-up on the Hal Roach back lot, and it clearly copies the Lambeth-style slum in Chaplin's "Easy Street" (which was also a too-obvious mock-up). The first half of this film is a blatant copy of "Easy Street". Pollard plays the local constable, charged with maintaining order in the tough slum district.
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Years to Come (1922)
Character: The Bridegroom
Like many a Snub Pollard comedy, "Years to Come" is a complete flight of fancy. In this one, it is the year 2000, and the roles of women and men have been completely reversed. That's where almost all the jokes come from.
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Sold at Auction (1923)
Character: The Auctioneer's Helper
This Hal Roach comedy short I found on the "American Slapstick" DVD collection of rare silent comedies starts bizarre and has an anything goes-quality one rarely sees in Mr. Roach's output. It stars Snub Pollard who is initially introduced as a baby left on a doorstep before we see him fully grown about 20 or so years later still in that basket! From there, he gets bumped car to car crossing the street prior to getting literally thrown through a window as an auction is taking place! Also appearing is James Finlayson as a man who's items accidentally get sold.
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The Big Idea (1924)
Character: Inventor Ignatius Pollard
Inventor Ignatius Pollard develops a new "Pavement Polisher" to clean the streets, but a demonstration of the device does not go as planned.
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The Doughboy (1926)
Character: N/A
The film begins with Snub going off to war in WWI. He manages to get lost behind enemy lines and spends most of the movie hiding or just barely escaping encounter after encounter with German soldiers.
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Mitt The Prince (1927)
Character: N/A
The film begins with Snub and Fat (yes, that IS the politically incorrect and cruel name given to Snub's partner in this and several other films made for the Weiss Brothers) want to make a few bucks. The film begins with them doing some maintenance sort of work--with Fat on a ladder and Snub sweeping outside. When this doesn't work out, a random stranger just happens to walk up to them and offer them HIS MOTHER'S CAR and asks them to make a delivery.
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Double Trouble (1927)
Character: N/A
"Snub" and his much larger dancing partner, "Fat" (Marvin Loback), struggle with each other in the room they share, try to crash the local vaudeville house and end up having to repossess a piano from their former landlord.
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Thick and Thin (1928)
Character: N/A
Roommates unable to pay the rent take to the streets in search of easy cash and free food.
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A Gasoline Wedding (1918)
Character: Snub
A rich man's daughter has more suitors than she's interested in, and he's going to marry her off -- even if she doesn't know about it.
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Hear 'Em Rave (1918)
Character: N/A
Hear 'Em Rave is a 1918 short comedy film featuring Harold Lloyd.
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Call for Mr. Caveman (1919)
Character: Hatchet Face
A giant cave man kidnaps beautiful Adorable from the cave clan and the man who rescues her can have her hand and a new suit of clothes.
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Waltz Me Around (1920)
Character: N/A
Delivery man 'Snub' Pollard and his assistant Sunshine Sammy nearly run over Marie Mosquini in the street and ends up at dance school.
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The Dumb-Bell (1922)
Character: The New Director
The owners of a movie studio are having problems with a temperamental director, and they promise an actor on one of his pictures that he can have the job if he can find a way to make the director leave the picture.
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Here Comes a Sailor (1928)
Character: N/A
Sailor Snub and his buddy meet two lovely ladies while on shore leave. They rent a car to impress them and drive the ladies to the park, where one by one they end up in the lake.
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Fresh Paint (1920)
Character: Bicycle Messenger
A bicycle messenger is sent to make a posh delivery to a wealthy artist's estate-- populated with attractive models.
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Dear Ol' Pal (1923)
Character: Abner Maize
Two lifelong friends vie for the affection of the same woman.
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Look Pleasant, Please (1918)
Character: Snub - the Janitor (as Harry Pollard)
A photo studio operator seems only interested in flirting with women. Hilarity ensues.
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Andy Plays Hookey (1946)
Character: Ticket Seller
Andy makes elaborate plans to attend a prizefight, and they all backfire.
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Run 'Em Ragged (1920)
Character: N/A
Run ’Em Ragged, Snub Pollard’s 39th starring vehicle, uses familiar slapstick-- Over-the-top make-up, ethnic humor, and a chase across Los Angeles’s Echo Park-- But there is more here than knockabout; Sophisticated sight gags test the limits of the characters’ perception, making expert use of such props as a seemingly bottomless rowboat.
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Big Game (1921)
Character: Hunter
While attempting to hunt a formidable Peruvian Duck, Snub Pollard and Ernest Morrison inadvertently come to the aid of a kidnapped tourist.
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The Old Sea Dog (1922)
Character: Snub the Ferryboat Pilot
Snub Pollard comedy directed by Charley Chase and produced by Hal Roach.
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Luke's Shattered Sleep (1916)
Character: N/A
Audiences may think Luke with his St. Vitus movement never sleeps, but they are dead wrong. Like Bill Shakespeare Luke "blesses the man who first invented sleep." After a screamingly comical search for slumber he finally hits the hay and sleeps without moving to Brooklyn.
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Name the Day (1921)
Character: N/A
Snub Pollard and Marie Mosquini are to be married, with Ernie Morrison as their best man. It's the usual gag-filled Pollard one-reeler, with William Gillespie pointing out that if she wants to get married, he has a marriage license too.
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Society Mugs (1946)
Character: Party Guest (uncredited)
Muriel Allen needs an escort to Alice Preston's dinner party, and her maid Petunia mistakenly places a telephone call to Acme Exterminators instead of Acme Escorts. It's Shemp and Tom to the rescue, and they're assumed to be cultured college seniors. Guest of honor Lord Wafflebottom follows the pest exterminators' lead in proper American party manners, turning the dinner party into an uncouth display. When mice are conveniently spotted, the boys go to work, disrupting the party and the entire mansion.
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On the Jump (1918)
Character: Snoopy Sam - The House Detective
On the Jump is a 1918 American short comedy film featuring Harold Lloyd.
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Be My Wife (1919)
Character: N/A
Harold and his boss get in a lively rivalry over the new stenographer.
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Luke, the Candy Cut-Up (1916)
Character: N/A
Working as a pastry chef, Luke steals a watch from a customer, which results in a wild police chase throughout the store.
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The Big Idea (1917)
Character: Snub
A clerk in a failing antiques store gets a big idea on how to move the merchandise so that he can save the store and possibly win the girl.
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Pinched (1917)
Character: N/A
Harold's checked cap, blown from his head by a freakish wind, gets him into trouble. First he comes into conflict with the police as a highwayman, then the cap serves to identify him as a housebreaker and lands him in jail, while the innocent cause of his trouble becomes his cellmate for another reason. Eventually a distracted wife rescues both her husband and Harold from the clutches of the law, the cap this time aiding him to regain his freedom.
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It's a Wild Life (1918)
Character: N/A
Harold invades the "Gilded Guzzle" café, where he appropriates a lady's roll of money, hides under a table and impersonates a cigar store Indian.
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Kicked Out (1918)
Character: N/A
Harold has trouble with his father and is ordered out of the house. He becomes a waiter and pulls off some highly amusing stunts at a swell dinner party.
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Swat the Crook (1919)
Character: N/A
The adventures of a penniless young man, who finds himself in a house full of crooks.
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At the Old Stage Door (1919)
Character: N/A
Our hero visits the opera, is mistaken for the manager and is treated like royalty until the deception is uncovered.
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Heap Big Chief (1919)
Character: N/A
Harold and Snub, camping in the wilds, prove too much for the Indians that take them captive.
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365 Days (1922)
Character: The Good Grandson
A very rich old man promises to leave his extended family his fortune if they all move in together and get along for one year.
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Girls Will Be Boys (1931)
Character: Plumber's assistant
A wife demands that her husband take over the household responsibilities, while she does his job, unaware that he is a piano mover. They both land in the hospital, sadder and sicker as a result of their experience.
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All Lit Up (1920)
Character: The Dandy
Snub goes butterfly hunting in Grffith Park and catches Marie Mosquini by accident. They go to a café where all the men have a lot of hair on their faces and the usual mischief ensues.
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Any Old Port (1920)
Character: N/A
Captain Dandy (Snub Pollard) is about to sail and arrives on the dock where several women take turns to individually say goodbye to him (the last one even wrestles him to the ground) before he boards the ship.
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Call a Taxi (1920)
Character: N/A
After being ejected from an establishment for being drunk and disorderly, George Rowe, Sammy Brooks, Hughie Mack and Snub Pollard form a drunken singing quartet in the street before a car comes and takes Sammy and George away, leaving the other two staggering in the road. Snub and Hughie agree to go somewhere "where there are no wives, landlords or prohibitionists", and so three months later they emerge on a prairie with supplies dwindling.
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Cash Customers (1920)
Character: The Chap
Snub Pollard (sans moustache) and Hughie Mack are tenants sharing a bed in a small hotel. They wake up at 6am and prepare breakfast with two eggs which are taken out of Snub's jacket pocket and put into a coffee perculator. The landlady (Vera White) storms up the stairs when she smells the coffee being made and demands that the janitor (Earl Mohan) break down the tenants' door with a pick-axe.
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High Rollers (1921)
Character: N/A
An auto accident hurls Snub into a skating rink, where he encounters Rowe and Marie. Among the various slip-and-falling going on, two frisky escaped monkeys from a show put on skates to join in and create pandemonium.
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On Location (1921)
Character: The Caretaker of the Estate
Snub is an street sweeper with OCD, living in a neighborhood full of fussy people. He is sweeping the street when he anticipates a cop who is about to throw some litter into the road and dashes over to catch it in his cart. He then tries to save a drunken man from falling into the road before stopping his cart to pick up a solitary leaf which has dared to fallen upon the ground. The eccentric and obsessed street sweeper meticulously disposes of the leaf but when he turns around he finds half the tree has shed its leaves at that very moment
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Punch the Clock (1922)
Character: Snub
Eddie suspects his wife of having an affair with Snub. Snub, meanwhile, just wants to get to work on time.
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Hale and Hearty (1922)
Character: N/A
A couple of old guys remembering the old days when courting Marie Mosquini.
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Join the Circus (1923)
Character: N/A
'Snub' Pollard wants to hang himself but figures joining the circus was better idea.
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Before the Public (1923)
Character: N/A
'Snub' Pollard is an local actor getting a big break in the movie industry, coming home to show off his fame.
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Get Busy (1924)
Character: Shorter pal
A couple of pals tries to stay out of trouble, without much luck.
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Once Over (1928)
Character: Snub Pollard
A pair of rail-riding bums exit their boxcar in the town of Excema, where they get work as waiters and have trouble with clams, bottles of beer, and pies.
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Sock and Run (1929)
Character: Alphonse
Wacky Frenchman Alphonse (Snub Pollard) competes in an American boxing match.
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Do Me a Favor (1922)
Character: A Hobo
Marie's inebriated husband refuses to go to bed, so she asks Snub, a homeless man she finds sleeping in the park, to assist.
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Start Something (1919)
Character: N/A
Snub is a traffic cop and succeeds in mixing things up by trying to flirt with every pretty girl motorist.
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Order in the Court (1919)
Character: N/A
Snub is confronted by his creditors who have joined the profiteers. He then escapes from them only to be pressed into jury service, which has its brighter side when he finds himself seated beside a fair member of the jury. The fun commences when all his creditors are marched into court charged with profiteering, and as foreman of the jury Snub gives out the verdict of "Guilty."
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It's a Hard Life (1919)
Character: N/A
A henpecked husband goes out on a series of adventures. He is pursued by cops and detectives and joins the Salvation Army in an effort to escape.
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Red Hot Hottentotts (1920)
Character: N/A
Rivalry over a girl in this country moves to the heart of Africa, where the principals get into difficulties with man-eating cannibals.
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Why Go Home? (1920)
Character: N/A
'Snub' Pollard and Mildred Davis star in this 1920 comedy short.
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Getting His Goat (1920)
Character: N/A
Snub's many humorous experiences in attempting to transport his goat home. Comedy short directed by Charley Chase.
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Luke's Society Mixup (1916)
Character: N/A
Luke, a mechanic, stands in for a famous violinist. At first, his bad manners and rough behavior are accepted as the eccentricities of genius. Then matters get out of hand.
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Bughouse Bellhops (1915)
Character: Moke Morpheus
Lonesome Luke and his accessory, Moke Morpheus, are discovered in bellhop uniform, blissfully dozing on a bench in the lobby of the Bughouse Hotel. Comes a guest, and the desk clerk rings a bellhop. But, in the words of Aristotle, or Ted or someone, "you can ring and you can ring, but the house is boarded up."
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Ragtime Snap Shots (1915)
Character: Snub Larkin
Lucas and Larkin, his running mate, after looking for a job for some time, finally land one in a photographer's shop and immediately start to take possession of the place. They rule supreme in their own inimitable way until a bespectacled college graduate arrives to have his diploma, and incidentally himself, photographed.
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Ruses, Rhymes and Roughnecks (1915)
Character: N/A
This offering tells the tale of one, Oscar Weeban, a fellow deeply in love with a certain Maisie. He has promised to take her to the Garbage Gentlemen's Rally, that annual society event of the small town in which it is their fortune to reside, and she sends him a note to this effect. He is a rank outsider, but manages to inject himself into the spirit of the affair and enters into the sport of the occasion with a vim. It is at this event that the ashes throwing contest is held every year, and garbage men from all sections, trained to the minute, flock to the party to compete. The contest is at its height and one of the experts is trying for a world's record when Oscar crosses the range. Of course, he and Maisie manage to get in the way of the winning throw and spoil the record which is about to be made.
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Lonesome Luke, Social Gangster (1915)
Character: Tin-Horn Tommy
Luke, a street tramp, is taken to a dance contest by a pretty millionairess, but when he is ejected, he returns with a gun and wreaks havoc.
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Wanted - $5,000 (1919)
Character: N/A
Wanted – $5,000 is a 1919 American short comedy film featuring Harold Lloyd and Bebe Daniels.
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Luke Lugs Luggage (1916)
Character: N/A
As a baggage handler at a terminal, Luke is led on a merry chase by a billy goat.
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Lonesome Luke Lolls in Luxury (1916)
Character: N/A
Luke, stranded on a desert island, becomes chief of the natives. When he pursues the affections of a pretty white girl, he runs afoul of her sweetheart and has to swim back home.
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Luke's Double (1916)
Character: N/A
Luke dreams that he has a double. One 'Luke' gets in all kinds of trouble, while the other pays the consequences.
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Luke's Late Lunchers (1916)
Character: N/A
Luke runs a beanery, in which the bad service, terrible food and filthy conditions lead to hi-jinx.
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Luke Laughs Last (1916)
Character: N/A
Unhappy in his job as a butler (although he likes wearing a dress suit), Luke gets involved with burglars and the law.
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Luke's Fatal Flivver (1916)
Character: N/A
Luke and friends are crowded into his two-seater, out for a ride in the country. Hayhem ensues when his party of fifteen encounters some 'fashionable folk.'
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Count the Votes (1919)
Character: N/A
Count the Votes is a 1919 American short comedy film. It is considered to be lost.
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Fire!! (1926)
Character: The Boy
At the Sans Scruples Hotel, the house fire inspector has to steer clear of a vamp and her jealous husband, and put out a fire to win the girl.
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Slippery Slickers (1920)
Character: N/A
Snub Pollard plays a man who tries to steal some food, but fails to do so. Being chased away by police, he accidentally finds himself attending a costume party where a robber is busy stealing jewelry from the guests.
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Charlie's Triple Trouble (1944)
Character: Flop House Tramp (archive footage)
British comedian Tommy Handley makes funny commentary on speeded up and shortened version of Triple trouble (1918)
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A Tough Winter (1923)
Character: N/A
An ice-cold Snub adopts a gamin and her brother; A mean landlord seeking rent complicates matters and the trio take a train to Florida. But by mistake the train goes to Iceland.
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Raise the Rent (1920)
Character: N/A
Snub and his wife give up their bungalow and allow another couple to move in. Then it develops that they can't find another home, and must live in an improvised tent.
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A Countless Count (1915)
Character: Count
The daughter and sweetheart are in love, but their affairs move anything but smoothly, because the father has other ideas for his daughter's marriage.
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Don't Rock the Boat (1920)
Character: N/A
Snub Pollard and Sunshine Sammy Morrison are on a storm tossed ship that soon sinks leaving the pair stranded on a nearby island where comic situations ensue.
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Vitamin 'U' for Me (1942)
Character: N/A
Dr. Whoozis' vitamin and exercise routine turn young girls into super-charged pin-up models
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Drink Hearty (1920)
Character: Snub
Snub conducts a blind pig in a barn, where the village cronies gather for their "licker," and the place is raided by revenue officers.
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A London Bobby (1920)
Character: N/A
Snub, as a member of the London police force, is assigned to a neighborhood where a terrific free-for-all battle is taking place. After the struggle is snuffed out by a particularly belligerent chap who wades into the crowd and sends its members into the land of twittering birdies with an assortment of right and left-handed blows, Snub steps forth and accepts credit for the feat.
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Full o' Pep (1922)
Character: Snub
The monkey gland operation is about to be performed upon Snub. A flash-back shows how the lack of pep has affected his spirits. While under ether he dreams that he has become an ape and is forced to swing upon the chandeliers and walk up the sides of the buildings. He wakes up just before the operation is performed and takes the chance to beat it out of the hospital. The horror of the dream gives him more pep than monkey glands.
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Blow 'Em Up (1922)
Character: The Governor
The governor's (Snub) life is in constant jeopardy because of the bomb throwers who use every conceivable means to get him.
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The Mystery Man (1923)
Character: Detective Snub Pollard
An unconventional super detective (Snub) pursues a trio of crooks who've stolen the fortune of his girlfriend's father. Along the way, absurd things happen like he's tricked into trailing a cow and he enters a cross-country foot race.
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Strictly Modern (1922)
Character: Chambermaid Man
A visiting New Yorker inspires the hotel keeper toward improving his establishment.
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The Green Cat (1923)
Character: Snub
Snub is determined to make his new restaurant, The Green Cat, a success---no matter what it takes.
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Pardon Me (1922)
Character: N/A
Snub puts over some amusing hokum in his efforts to be arrested.
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Some Baby (1922)
Character: N/A
Newlyweds have a baby wished on them as a wedding present.
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Just My Luck (1935)
Character: Frank Smith
Homer Crow, fired from his laboratory job at the Dunn-Wright Rubber Company, is sure that his formula for an indestructible rubber, called Durex, will be a success. Others are also, and Honer endures many obstacles, prat-falls and staged accidents while striving to protect his inventions.
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Grab the Ghost (1920)
Character: Husband
As tens of guests pile out of a wedding ceremony a jilted and bitter rival (Eddie Boland) vows revenge on the new bride. The wedding limo pulls off leaving the groom (Snub Pollard) behind, who then has to chase it down the street. He catches it up but is made to sit on the back of the car "as ballast". The car comes to a halt where the groom mistakes a policeman's gesturing of traffic as an offer of a handshake. Finally, the groom arrives at his house where his servant greets him, but unbeknownst to him, the servant's child (Ernest Morrison) has set up a scare in the shape of an "angora" bird in a cage under the dinner table before they get there.
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Springtime Saps (1929)
Character: N/A
Snub Pollard and Marvin Loback find comic situations as bums, night cops and seance attendees in this silent short.
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Whirl o' the West (1921)
Character: The Tenderfoot
A tenderfoot arrives in a western town and the inhabitants give him a rough time.
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Red Skins and Red Heads (1941)
Character: Party Guest (uncredited)
Whitley and his singing group want to make time with young ladies at a finishing school...and vice-versa. However, the old matron in charge threatens to shoot Ray and his men so they come up with a plan to trick her.
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The Night Is Young (1935)
Character: Drummer (uncredited)
Young Austrian Archduke Paul "Gustl" Gustave is in an arranged engagement but his uncle, the emperor, decides to let Gustl carry on a fling with ballet dancer Lisl Gluck.
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A Jazzed Honeymoon (1919)
Character: N/A
This time, Harold's the skinny sap who married the hottie, and he doesn't quite have the spine to tell her ex-beaus to blow. The honeymoon finds him mistaken for a boiler worker.
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Foreign Agent (1942)
Character: Supper Club Patron
Hollywood starlet foils an Axis plot to sabotage the L.A. infrastructure.
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Main Street Today (1944)
Character: Pop Denton (uncredited)
This patriotic short film promotes America's war effort at home. The story looks at a fictional small town's main street, seeing where additional workforce, for increased production of materials needed by the military, might come from.
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Edge of Darkness (1943)
Character: Townsman in Church (uncredited)
The film pivots around the local Norwegian doctor and his family. The doctor's wife (Ruth Gordon) wants to hold on to the pretence of gracious living and ignore their German occupiers. The doctor, Martin Stensgard (Walter Huston), would also prefer to stay neutral, but is torn. His brother-in-law, the wealthy owner of the local fish cannery, collaborates with the Nazis. The doctor's daughter, Karen (Ann Sheridan), is involved with the resistance and with its leader Gunnar Brogge (Errol Flynn). The doctor's son has just returned to town, having been sent down from the university, and is soon influenced by his Nazi-sympathizer uncle. Captain Koenig (Helmut Dantine), the young German commandant of the occupying garrison, whose fanatic determination to do everything by the book and spoutings about the invincibility of the Reich hides a growing fear of a local uprising.
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His Royal Slyness (1920)
Character: Prince of Rochquefort
A young adventurer trades places with a European prince and falls in love above his station.
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Nation Aflame (1937)
Character: Edgar Wolfe (as Snub Pollard)
Believing they can make a ton of money, a gang of opportunists uses the country's racial and ethnic tensions to start a Ku Klux Klan-type organization.
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Great While It Lasted (1915)
Character: Hugo Snubb
Luke lives the life of a millionaire until it is discovered that a mistake has been made and his inheritance belongs to someone else.
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Ring Up the Curtain (1919)
Character: The Leading Man
Stage hand Harold falls in love with the leading lady of a visiting theatrical troupe.
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Sing Cowboy Sing (1937)
Character: Prisoner
Kalmus is after the freight contract held by Summers. When his gang kill Summers, Tex and Duke step in to help Madge keep the freight line going. When they foil the gang's further attempts, Kalmus gets the Judge to jail the two.
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Count Your Change (1919)
Character: Billy Bullion
Harold becomes the victim of a clever bulldog pup who chases him in and out of various places.
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Police (1916)
Character: First Flophouse Customer
Charlie is released from prison and immediately swindled by a fake parson. A fellow ex-convict convinces Charlie to help burglarize a house.
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State Fair (1945)
Character: Hog Calling Contest Spectator (uncredited)
During their annual visit to the Iowa State Fair, the Frake family enjoy many adventures. Proud patriarch Abel has high hopes for his champion swine Blueboy; and his wife Melissa enters the mincemeat and pickles contest...with hilarious results.
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Rollin' Plains (1938)
Character: Pee Wee
It's cattlemen versus sheepmen and Trigger Gargan appears to be the leader of the gang causing the trouble. But unknown to Ranger Tex Lawrence, the respected town citizen Barrow is the boss and is tipping off the gang as to the Ranger's activities.
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The Man with the Golden Arm (1955)
Character: Street Vagrant (uncredited)
When illegal card dealer and recovering heroin addict Frankie Machine gets out of prison, he decides to straighten up. Armed with nothing but an old drum set, Frankie tries to get honest work as a drummer. But when his former employer and his old drug dealer re-enter his life, Frankie finds it hard to stay clean and eventually finds himself succumbing to his old habits.
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Billy Blazes, Esq. (1919)
Character: Sheriff 'Gun Shy' Gallagher
Billy Blazes confronts Crooked Charley, who has been ruling the town of Peaceful Vale through fear and violence.
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The Road to Singapore (1931)
Character: Photographer at Birthday Party
A woman's life falls to pieces when she's caught cheating on her husband.
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His Regeneration (1915)
Character: Extra
A rough criminal gets a second chance at life thanks to a kindly (and wealthy) lady saloon patron. But he hasn't gone straight yet, as he and a partner attempt to rob the home of a rich homeowner-- whose wife is asleep in the next room.
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Nothing But Trouble (1918)
Character: N/A
Harold appears as an active young man who gets a job as waiter in a restaurant. Disaster overtakes him and he is hurried off to jail at the close.
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Square Dance Jubilee (1949)
Character: Show Spectator
Two talent scouts for a New York-based country music TV show called "Square Dance Jubilee" are sent out West to get authentic western singing acts. They find what they're looking for, but also get mixed up in cattle rustling and murder.
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Jeanne Eagels (1957)
Character: Quartermaster Bates in 'Rain' (uncredited)
Biographical film based loosely on the life of 1920s stage star Jeanne Eagels.
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Thunder Mountain (1947)
Character: Townsman (uncredited)
Marvin Hayden returns to find his ranch is about to be sold at auction and the Hayden Jorth feud still going strong. Carson wants the Hayden ranch and tries to kill Hayden. When he fails he kills Chick Jorth with a rock. As Hayden does not carry a gun and the two had argued earlier, Hayden is arrested for the murder. With Hayden in jail, his friends Chito, Ginger, and his Lawyer Gardner now go to work to find the murderer.
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Ask Father (1919)
Character: The Corn-Fed Secretary
Lloyd is a serious young middle-class guy on the make who wants to marry the boss’ daughter. The problem is getting in to see the boss so that he can ask for her hand in marriage as the office is guarded by a bunch of comic, clumsy flunkies who throw everyone out who tries to get in.
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Bashful (1917)
Character: Snub the Butler
In order to claim his inheritance, our hero must first produce a wife and family.
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Lure of the Wasteland (1939)
Character: Cookie
A "special" by Monogram standards, Lure of the Wasteland was lensed in a not inexpensive process called Telco-color. Grant Withers takes a break from his duties in the "Mister Wong" series to play Smitty, a US marshal assigned to track down $250,000 in stolen bonds.
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By the Sad Sea Waves (1917)
Character: Spectator at Beach
Our vagabond hero dons a lifeguard's uniform and madcap antics ensue on the beach, and in the changing stalls!
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Bowery at Midnight (1942)
Character: Knocked-out Motorist (uncredited)
A seemingly charitable soup kitchen operator (who moonlights as a criminology professor) uses his Bowery mission as a front for his criminal gang. Police attempt to close in on the gang as they commit a series of robberies, murders and bizarre experiments on corpses.
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Bumping Into Broadway (1919)
Character: The Musical Comedy's Director
A young playwright spends his last cent to pay the past-due rent for the pretty dancer who's his boarding house next-door neighbor. Soon after, he winds up at a gambling club, where he wins big - just before a police raid.
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Hey There (1918)
Character: The New Director
In this early short Harold Lloyd sneaks into a movie studio in order to locate an attractive young lady he's just met at a snack bar. He's retrieved a letter she dropped and wants to return it to her, but it's pretty clear that his interest extends beyond mere politeness. (She's the adorable young Bebe Daniels, so this is easy to understand.) The movie studio setting provides Harold with lots of opportunities to do what comedians do in comedies like this one: flirt with actresses, anger the studio brass, and dash through sets disrupting everything.
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The Midnight Patrol (1932)
Character: N/A
A cub reporter rashly makes a promise to solve a murder mystery within 24 hours, then must make good on his boast.
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Loaded Pistols (1948)
Character: Second Small Man at Dance (uncredited)
A singing cowboy clears a boy accused of murder by finding the real killer.
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Jungle Terror (1946)
Character: Campbell
Re-edited feature film version of the 1937 serial, Jungle Menace.
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Where the Buffalo Roam (1938)
Character: Pee Wee
Tex returns to Santa Fe to find his Mother murdered. Foster runs the town and all crimes committed by his gang are blamed on Rogel and his men. He makes Tex Marshal but this backfires when Tex enlists Rogel and his men and goes after Foster who he now knows is responsible for his Mother's death.
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Stars in My Crown (1950)
Character: Bartender (uncredited)
Civil War veteran Josiah Grey comes to a small town to be a gospel minister. In time, he has a family and many friends but also finds friction with a few of his parishioners.
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The Girl in the Case (1944)
Character: Witness (uncredited)
William Warner is a lawyer who is famous for his skill at opening any kind of lock, making him a valuable commodity. William is unknowingly enlisted by German spies who want him to open a chest containing a secret formula. This leads to a madcap adventure involving spies, the police and lots of picked locks!
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Carrie (1952)
Character: Lunch Wagon Counterman (uncredited)
Carrie's dreams of adventure in the big city are quickly squashed as she discovers all that awaits her there is a bleak life of grueling and poorly paid factory work—that is, until a traveling salesman named Drouet steps into her life and changes her outlook.
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A Girl, a Guy, and a Gob (1941)
Character: Wedding Chapel Attendant (uncredited)
Steve is a shy quiet man who is an executive for a shipping firm. He meets Dot at the Opera where she had his seats and the next day she shows up as his temporary secretary. Then Coffee Cup comes to town to see Dot, his gal. When Steven is with Cecilia, everything is boring. When he is with Dot and Coffee Cup, everything is exciting and he falls for Dot. But Coffee is getting out of the Navy in a few days and he plans to marry Dot.
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The Gunfighter (1950)
Character: Townsman at Funeral (uncredited)
The fastest gun in the West tries to escape his reputation.
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The Fast and the Furious (1954)
Character: Park Caretaker
A framed man escapes prison and takes a wealthy woman's Jaguar with her in it. After she tries to escape numerous times, they begin to develop feelings for each other, and enter a road race that ends in Mexico.
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Step Lively (1917)
Character: N/A
Snub Pollard plays a drunken man-about-town who believes Harold has robbed him. Meanwhile, Bebe has her hands full with a lounge lizard who won't take no for an answer.
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The Tin Star (1957)
Character: Townsman(uncredited)
An experienced bounty hunter helps a young sheriff learn the meaning of his badge.
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It Happened in Flatbush (1942)
Character: Baseball Game Spectator (uncredited)
A washed up baseball player returns to Brooklyn to manage his old team but an old sports reporter is eager to prove that he is a loser.
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'Neath Brooklyn Bridge (1942)
Character: Soup Customer (uncredited)
The East Side Kids find a young girl in the apartment of a man who has just been murdered. Believing her to be innocent, they hide her in their clubhouse while they try to find the real killer. The killer, however, used a baseball bat as his murder weapon, and the bat has the fingerprints of one of the gang on it.
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Si, Senor (1919)
Character: N/A
Our hero is a barber in a small Mexican town, wooing a local senorita, against the wishes of her mother.
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The Rawhide Terror (1934)
Character: Renegade
Twelve renegades dressed as Indians kill the parents of two brothers. The brothers who have similar birth marks then separate. Ten years later a man known as the Rawhide Terror is murdering the renegades who are now town citizens. Everyone is after the Rawhide Terror and the two brothers are destined to meet again.
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Walk Softly, Stranger (1950)
Character: Custodian on Stairway (uncredited)
A petty crook moves to an Ohio town and courts a factory owner's disabled daughter.
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The Drunkard (1935)
Character: Property Man
An unscrupulous lawyer uses alcohol to swindle an innocent family.
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A Woman's Secret (1949)
Character: Stagehand (Uncredited)
A popular singer, Marian Washburn, suddenly and unexplainably loses her voice, causing a shake-up at the club where she works. Her worried but loyal piano player, Luke Jordan, helps to promote a new, younger singer, Susan Caldwell, to temporarily replace Marian. Susan finds some early acclaim but decides to leave the club after a few performances. Soon after Susan quits, she is gunned down, and Marian quickly becomes a suspect.
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Rollin' Westward (1939)
Character: Poker Player
A cowboy helps a pretty young woman and her father in their fight against land-grabbers who are trying to swindle them out of their cattle ranch.
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Before Breakfast (1919)
Character: N/A
A young man's dreams are shaken by his father's insistence that he get a job and go to work. He becomes a waiter in a restaurant, and has some funny adventures.
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Pal Joey (1957)
Character: Waiter (uncredited)
An opportunistic singer woos a wealthy widow to boost his career.
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Tex Rides with the Boy Scouts (1937)
Character: Pee Wee
Tex is after the gang that robbed a train of a gold shipment. He suspects Dorman is the culprit and is hiding their gold at his mine. When Stubby sees Dorman's henchman Stark cash in some gold nuggets, Tex tricks Dorman into moving the gold. He hopes to round them up with the help of the posse and the local Boy Scout Troop.
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Cheyenne (1947)
Character: Barfly (uncredited)
Slick gambler James Wylie is apprehended by the law and given the option to forgo a prison sentence if he poses as a bandit. His mission is to uncover the identity of the Poet, a notorious outlaw who has been holding up bank-owned stagecoaches and leaving verses at the crime scenes to taunt the authorities. James finds time to woo the Poet's lovely wife, Ann, who initially cold-shoulders him. But, as a romance develops, they partner up to find the robber.
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Kid Dynamite (1943)
Character: Dance Official
The East Side boxing champion Muggs answers a challenge to a fight against the West Side champ but just before the match he is kidnapped. His friend Danny Lyons takes his place and wins the fight, only to have Mugs believe that Danny was responsible for his kidnapping.
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Murder on the Yukon (1940)
Character: Archie
Unknown to Joan Manning, her trading post partner Weathers is operating a counterfeiting ring. When miner Jim Smithers brings his gold dust in, Weathers pays him off in counterfeit money. Jim's drunken brother, Bill, comes to the post and Weathers hears him say that Jim is leaving the area for good. Weathers sends Hawks to kill Jim and retrieve the bogus money. RCMP Sergeant Renfrew and Constable Kelly find Jim's body, and Renfrew hurries for Jim's cabin to search it. He is attacked by Weathers' men who have found the money. Renfrew is suspicious when Bill Smithers body is found, supposedly a suicide, with a note he had burned the money. This leads the Mounties to suspect counterfeiting. Kelly follows Manti, an Indian who works for Weathers, to the gang's hideout and is captured. But Renfrew is trailing Kelly.
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The Black Coin (1936)
Character: Vic Moran
Government agents try to thwart smugglers, while some sort of plot unfolds, about a hidden treasure revealed by cursed coins.
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Mesquite Buckaroo (1939)
Character: Janitor Suds
It's time for the big rodeo and it's Bob of the Allen ranch against Luke Williams of the Barns ranch. With Bob leading after the first day, Sands and Trigger kidnap him to keep him from winning.
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Over the Fence (1917)
Character: Snitch, Another
Snitch steals Ginger's (stolen) baseball tickets and takes Ginger's girl to the game. Finding himself without tickets, Ginger dresses as a baseball player and wins the game. A possible debut of the "Glasses" or "Boy" character.
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Hittin' the Trail (1937)
Character: Bartender
When he swaps horses with the Tombstone Kid — a wrongly accused man on the run from the law — singing cowboy Tex Randall gets arrested by the local sheriff in a case of mistaken identity.
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Just Dropped In (1919)
Character: N/A
Harold and Snub take a trip on a runaway airplane and drop off on a native island. Here they have some amusing adventures with the fierce men and beautiful women of the place.
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One-Eyed Jacks (1961)
Character: Townsman (uncredited)
Running from the law after a bank robbery in Mexico, Dad Longworth finds an opportunity to take the stolen gold and leave his partner Rio to be captured. Years later, Rio escapes from the prison where he has been since, and hunts down Dad for revenge. Dad is now a respectable sheriff in California, and has been living in fear of Rio's return.
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Canyon Passage (1946)
Character: Miner (uncredited)
In 1850s Oregon, a businessman is torn between his love of two very different women and his loyalty to a compulsive gambler friend who goes over the line.
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The Lady Gambles (1949)
Character: Elevator Operator (uncredited)
When Joan Boothe accompanies husband-reporter David to Las Vegas, she begins gambling to pass the time while he is doing a story. Encouraged by the casino manager, she gets hooked on gambling, to the point where she "borrows" David's expense money to pursue her addiction. This finally breaks up their marriage, but David continues trying to help her.
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Scaramouche (1952)
Character: Man at Assembly Meeting
In 18th-century France, a young man masquerades as an actor to avenge his friend's murder.
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Pete Kelly's Blues (1955)
Character: Waiter (uncredited)
In 1927, a Kansas City, Missouri cornet player and his band perform nightly at a seedy speakeasy until a racketeer tries to extort them in exchange for protection.
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Rockin' in the Rockies (1945)
Character: Drunk (uncredited)
Rancher Rusty Williams is away at agricultural college and leaves his spread in the hands of his older cousin Shorty. Shorty wants to do more than run a ranch, however -- he wants to prospect for gold, but he has no money. He recruits a pair of partners in the guise of two runaway vagrants and a pair of backers in two stranded singers. But then Rusty shows up, and his four somewhat bumbling hired hands manage to compound Larry and Curly's deep ineptitude, and Rusty wants them all out of his hair.
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From Hand to Mouth (1919)
Character: The Kidnapper
As a penniless man worries about how he will manage to eat, he is joined by a young waif and her dog, who are in the same predicament. Meanwhile, across town a dishonest lawyer is working with a gang of criminals, trying to swindle an innocent young heiress out of her inheritance. As the heiress is on her way home from the lawyer's office, she notices the young man and the waif in the midst of their latest problem with the authorities, and she rescues them. Later on, the young man will have an unexpected opportunity to repay her for her kindness.
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Two-Gun Gussie (1918)
Character: Snub
A mild-mannered young man has left home, and is now playing the piano in a bar in the west. The dangerous criminal Dagger-Tooth Dan enters the bar where the young man is playing. Soon afterwards, the local sheriff also arrives, with some letters that he has received. Dan notices the letters, and he switches the information in them to make the sheriff think that the piano player is the dangerous one.
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Park Row (1952)
Character: Barfly
In New York's 1880s newspaper district, a dedicated journalist manages to set up his own paper. It is an immediate success but attracts increasing opposition from one of the bigger papers and its newspaper heiress owner.
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Ghosts on the Loose (1943)
Character: Flower Delivery Man (uncredited)
The East Side Kids try to fix up a house for newlyweds, but find the place next door "haunted" by mysterious men.
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Partners in Time (1946)
Character: Townsman (uncredited)
Squire Skimp has a new plan to swindle the people of Pine Ridge. However, Lum has something more important on his mind. He has to tell a young engaged couple on the verge of breaking up the story of how the Jot 'em Down store first started (through flashbacks). Based on characters from the popular "Lum and Abner" radio program of the time.
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Valley of Fire (1951)
Character: Townsman
An outcast gambler hijacks a wagon train of eligible women taken west by a mayor.
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Back to the Woods (1919)
Character: His Valet
Harold and Snub are self-proclaimed big-game hunters who stop at a remote outpost. They hire two native guides to lead them into the woods, but the guides run in terror when they see a rather tame bear in the distance. Harold is annoyed that he cannot find any bears to hunt--unaware that two timid bears are closely following him. Meanwhile Snub encounters an equally tame wildcat who eats his picnic lunch. Snub sprints away. Back at the outpost, Harold twice rescues Jeanne--once from the clutches of an unwanted suitor and once from one of the bears. The grateful, gun-toting Jeanne tells Harold she wants him to be her "sweetie."
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The Barefoot Mailman (1951)
Character: Townsman at Dance (uncredited)
Sylvanus Hurley is a swindler who's been swindled: he's been given a deed to a large plot of mangrove swamp in the out-of-the-way community. So he decides to con the locals, some of whom are not as honest as he....
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Starlight Over Texas (1938)
Character: Pee Wee
Tex has been sent to investigate the theft of government provisions along the border. Kildare is the leader of the outlaw gang and has his men posing as Indians. He has already killed the incoming Marshal and assumed his identity. When Tex asks too many questons, he plans to get rid of him also.
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Headin' for the Rio Grande (1936)
Character: Cookie (Hart hand)
Western - Singing cowboy Tex Saunders (Tex Ritter) finds himself in a heap of trouble when he agrees to investigate local gangsters at the behest of a lovely lady (Eleanor Stewart). As payment for his pains, he's framed by a saloon owner (Warner Richmond) for killing bad guy Red Dugan (James Mason) and forced to sweat it out in jail. Will his faithful sidekick, Chilo (Syd Saylor), show up to save his skin … or will Tex have a date with the gallows? - Tex Ritter, Warner Richmond, Eleanor Stewart
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Man of a Thousand Faces (1957)
Character: Comedy Waiter #2
The turbulent life and professional career of vaudeville actor and silent screen horror star Lon Chaney (1883-1930), the man of a thousand faces; bearer of many personal misfortunes that even his great success could not mitigate.
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The Rajah (1919)
Character: N/A
A Harold Lloyd short featuring a young Snooky the chimp
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The Purchase Price (1932)
Character: Harmonica Player Joe Atterbury (uncredited)
Nightclub singer Joan Gordon runs away from her gangster boyfriend to become a mail-order bride to a struggling North Dakota farmer. Their relationship has a rocky start, but just as Joan realizes she's developing feelings for her husband, her old boyfriend arrives to win her back.
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The Crooked Way (1949)
Character: N/A
A war veteran suffering from amnesia, returns to Los Angeles from a San Francisco veterans hospital hoping to learn who he is and discovers his criminal past.
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Going! Going! Gone! (1919)
Character: N/A
Lloyd and Pollard help a young girl out of the water but they are then chased by a shrew. On a bicycle built for two, Lloyd lazes about on the back while Pollard sweats from all of his effort. Thieves escape by car but it breaks down. Lloyd and Pollard help them start up again but the thieves steal the tandem bicycle, leaving the car in the hands of the heros.
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The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)
Character: Statehood Audience Member (uncredited)
Questions arise when Senator Stoddard (James Stewart) attends the funeral of a local man named Tom Doniphon (John Wayne) in a small Western town. Flashing back, we learn Doniphon saved Stoddard, then a lawyer, when he was roughed up by a crew of outlaws terrorizing the town, led by Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin). As the territory's safety hung in the balance, Doniphon and Stoddard, two of the only people standing up to him, proved to be very important, but different, foes to Valance.
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Bees in His Bonnet (1918)
Character: N/A
Bees in His Bonnet is a 1918 American short comedy film featuring Harold Lloyd. It is presumed to be lost.
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Runaway Daughters (1956)
Character: Mr. Fields, Little Drunk at Dance Club
Three teenagers with troubled families are unable to adjust at home and in high-school. Tempted with an easy, carefree life they soon pass from misdemeanors into serious crime - and will suffer for it. Sometimes, repentance comes too late.
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Goofs and Saddles (1937)
Character: Bad guy caught by sash window in shed (uncredited)
Set in the old west, the stooges are spies for US Calvary; "Buffalo Bilious", "Wild Bill Hiccup" and "Just Plain Bill". Sent by General "Muster" to catch a gang of cattle rustlers, they wind up in a saloon where the boss of the gang hangs out. The boys disguise themselves as gamblers and get into a card game with the villain, but must flee when their identities are discovered. They hole up in a cabin, fighting off the bad guys, until the calvary arrives.
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The Perils of Pauline (1947)
Character: Western Saloon Set Propman
Funloving Pearl White, working in a garment sweatshop, gets her big chance when she "opens" for a delayed Shakespeare play...with a comic vaudeville performance. Her brief stage career leads her into those "horrible" moving pictures, where she comes to love the chaotic world of silent movies, becoming queen of the serials. But the consequences of movie stardom may be more than her leading man can take
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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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Cockeyed Cavaliers (1934)
Character: King's Physician's Aide
Two yokels try to crash royal society by posing as the King's physicians.
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Stand by for Action (1942)
Character: Sailor (uncredited)
U. S. Navy Lieutenant Gregg Masterman, of The Harvard and Boston Back Bay Mastermans, learned about the sea while winning silver cups sailing his yacht. He climbs swiftly in rank, and is now Junior Aide to Rear Admiral Stephen Thomas.
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Conquest of Cochise (1953)
Character: Barfly (uncredited)
A cavalry officer tries to keep a lid on a volatile situation when Indian leader Cochise is being prodded into starting a war.
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Off the Trolley (1919)
Character: Trolley conductor
Harold Lloyd plays a troublemaker who messes up with strangers and cops along the way. During the confusion he takes a trolley to escape, falling in love with a female collector who doesn't care much about him and he also annoys the trolley conductor. But it seems that odds and luck will be on his favor.
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Phony Express (1943)
Character: Sheriff Hogwaller (uncredited)
Set in the old west, the stooges are three tramps wanted for vagrancy. After ruining a medicine peddlers show, they arrive in Peaceful Gulch where a picture has been printed declaring them to be three famous lawmen coming to clean up the town. Assigned to guard the bank, the boys have the local gang scared at first, but when the gang learns who the stooges really are, they rob the bank. The boys go in pursuit, find the bad guy's hideout, subdue the bandits and recover the money. Written by Mitch Shapiro
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Homicidal (1961)
Character: Eddie, Bellhop (Uncredited)
A woman named Emily checks into a hotel and offers the bellboy $2000 to temporarily marry her. We soon find out Emily is the caretaker of a wheelchair-bound mute named Helga, who was the childhood guardian of a pair of siblings: Miriam Webster and her half-brother, Warren, who is about to inherit the estate of their late father. Who is the mysterious Emily and what are her intentions?
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Meet Me After the Show (1951)
Character: Stage Door Johnnie in Opening Number (uncredited)
A Broadway star devises a scheme to win back her husband when she suspects he's being unfaithful.
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Arizona Days (1937)
Character: Cookie
Tex and sidekick Grass join McGill's traveling show. When Price has McGill's wagons burned, Tex becomes the county tax collector to earn money. This leads to trouble as one of those owing money is Price who says he will not pay. Business doesn´t go as plan.
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Take a Chance (1918)
Character: Simplex Joe
It's a classic boy-meets-girl story, boy-loses-girl, boy gets mistaken for an escaped convict and ruthlessly chased by armies of cops across the countryside in a thrill-packed stunt-addled climax.
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I'm on My Way (1919)
Character: The Neighbor
Harold Lloyd's character loves Bebe Daniels' character and is about to marry her. But then he meets the clan of Snub Pollard where it's a riot all the time.
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Pocketful of Miracles (1961)
Character: Knuckles (uncredited)
A New York gangster and his girlfriend attempt to turn street beggar Apple Annie into a society lady when the peddler learns her daughter is marrying royalty.
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Clubs Are Trump (1917)
Character: N/A
In pre-historic times (dream sequence), our hero, in a loin cloth, battles other cavemen over the opposite sex.
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Sister Kenny (1946)
Character: Man at Barn Dance (uncredited)
An Australian nurse discovers an effective new treatment for infantile paralysis, but experiences great difficulty in convincing doctors of the validity of her claims.
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Just Neighbors (1919)
Character: The Neighbor
Suburban neighbors join together to build a garden shed, but through carelessness, wind up ruining the garden, as well as the laundry, which is drying in the yard.
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Santa Fe Rides (1937)
Character: Stubby
The Transcontinental Broadcasting Company sends a sound truck and equipment to a ranch to obtain an audition from "Santa Fe" Evans and his musical cowboys (Oscar Gahan, Lloyd Perryman, Robert "Curley" Hoag, Rudy Sooter and Sherry Tansey.) Carver, arch enemy of Evans and a rival for the love of Carol Sheldon, fails in an attempt to spoil the audition. Carver frames Mr. Sheldon and Carol's brother Buddy on a charge, by Al Jensen, of receiving cattle stolen from him by Evans. Carver blames Evans for all of the Sheldon's troubles and, what with one thing or another, it looks like Evans and his cowhands will miss the big broadcast.
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It Happened Tomorrow (1944)
Character: N/A
A young turn-of-the-century newspaper man finds he can get hold of the next day's paper. This brings more problems than fortune, especially as his new girlfriend is part of a phony clairvoyant act.
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Sky Bandits (1940)
Character: Pa, Man in Nightshirt
Sgt. Renfrew and Constable Kelly go aloft to search for a plane missing with a shipment of gold from the Yukon Mine Company. Inventor Speavy has devised a power ray which disrupts electrical impulses, and Morgan and his gang of crooks has brought in Prof. Lewis to increase the ray's range, telling him he's helping the government develop this new weapon. Speavy spills the beans to Prof. Lewis and his daughter Madeleine,and Morgan threatens to implicate them in his crimes unless they cooperate. Morgan kills Speavy when he tries to warn Renfrew, but when Madeleine stows away on board the doomed plane Renfrew is piloting, will the crooks be able to make Prof. Lewis use the power ray to bring the plane down?
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Casanova Brown (1944)
Character: Father at Baby Window (uncredited)
Cass Brown is about to marry for the second time; his first marriage, to Isabel was annulled. But when he discovers that Isabel just had their baby, Cass kidnaps the infant to keep her from being adopted. Isabel's parents hunt for the child and discover that Cass and Isabel are still hopelessly in love.
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The Lamb (1918)
Character: N/A
The Lamb is a 1918 American short comedy film starring Harold Lloyd. It is believed to be lost.
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Captain Kidd's Kids (1919)
Character: The Valet
After a wild bachelor party, our hero finds himself aboard a sailing vessel where he encounters numerous adventures. In a dream sequence, he fantasizes that the ship is seized by a band of female pirates.
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Young Mr. Jazz (1919)
Character: Snub
While running away from his girl's father, Harold's car breaks down in front of a dance hall run by crooks. Harold has to not only stay one step ahead of the girl's father, but also those trying to rob them of everything they have.
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Ridin' the Cherokee Trail (1941)
Character: Saloon Drunk
Singing cowboy Tex Ritter and his sidekick, Slim Andrews, star in this musical Western about a couple of Texas Rangers who defend the citizens of a small territory from power-hungry outlaws. Villain Bradley Craven (Forrest Taylor) is determined to stop the election process that would allow the region to join the Union. Tex and Slim join a rancher and his daughter to stop Craven, with fearless Tex going undercover to ensure that justice is served.
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Belle Starr's Daughter (1948)
Character: Party Guest (uncredited)
The daughter of famous outlaw Belle Starr arrives at the town where her mother was murdered to find her killer.
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Clancy Street Boys (1943)
Character: Irate Father (uncredited)
Muggs' rich Uncle Pete is coming to visit. Unfortunately, Muggs' late father had bragged that he had seven kids, so Muggs recruits the members of the gang to pose as his family. Things turn sour, however, when a local mobster finds out about Muggs' deception and threatens to expose it.
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Strange Impersonation (1946)
Character: Taxi driver (uncredited)
A female research scientist conducting experiments on a new anesthetic has a very bad week. Her scheming assistant intentionally scars her face, her almost-fiancee appears to have deserted her and she finds herself being blackmailed by a women she accidentally knocked down with her car.
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Here Come the Girls (1918)
Character: N/A
Bebe and girlfriend go shopping for new corsets. Harold sneaks into the corset shop and a customer asks him to take her measurements - a ticklish task, as the brash young man suddenly becomes playfully bashful.
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Monkey Businessmen (1946)
Character: Mr. Grimble (uncredited)
The stooges are bumbling electricians who decide to go away for a rest after they are fired for their incompetence. The rest home they choose is run by Dr. Mallard, a quack who gyps the patients for everything they've got. When the boys discover the crooked goings on they escape, but not before Curly accidentally cures another patient who rewards him with a thousand dollars.
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Jungle Menace (1937)
Character: Campbell
Mystery and adventure, surrounding a stolen rubber harvest.
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The Non-Stop Kid (1918)
Character: Snub, the Butler
Bebe is surrounded by suitors, but her father wants her to marry Professor M. T. Noodle. Harold makes his move by impersonating the professor.
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The Kid Rides Again (1943)
Character: Saloon Swamper
Billy the Kid has been wrongfully arrested for robbing a train. In order to prove his innocence, the Kid breaks out of jail and hits the trail to search for the real robbers. Along the way, he discovers that an outlaw band has been impersonating upstanding ranchers.
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House of Strangers (1949)
Character: N/A
Gino Monetti is a ruthless Italian-American banker who is engaged in a number of criminal activities. Three of his four grown sons refuse to help their father stay out of prison after he's arrested for his questionable business practices. Three of the sons take over the business but kick their father out. Max, a lawyer, is the only son that stays loyal to his father.
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Stingaree (1934)
Character: Victor
A young lady named Hilda who works as a servant for the wealthy Clarksons, sheep farmers, and dreams of being a great singer. An upcoming visit by Sir Julian, a famous composer arriving from London, drives jealous Mrs. Clarkson (an interfering biddy who fancies she can sing - but can't) to send away Hilda, so he doesn't hear Hilda has a good voice. Meanwhile, an infamous outlaw named Stingaree has just arrived in town and kidnaps Sir Julian, then poses as him at the Clarksons, where he meets Hilda a few hours before she is to leave.
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The Paradine Case (1947)
Character: Cabby (uncredited)
Attorney Anthony Keane agrees to represent Londonite Mrs. Paradine, who has been fingered in her husband's murder. From the start, the married lawyer is drawn to the enigmatic beauty, and he begins to cast about for a way to exonerate his client. Keane puts the Paradine household servant on the stand, suggesting he is the killer. But Keane soon loses his way in the courtroom, and his half-baked plan sets off a stunning chain of events.
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Giving Them Fits (1915)
Character: Luke's Co-Worker
Lonesome Luke, working in a shoe store, has difficulty keeping his mind on business whenever a pretty girl is on the scene.
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Bars of Hate (1935)
Character: Danny, the Pickpocket
Ted Clark rescues pickpoket Danny from a mob, and restores Danny's loot, a pocketbook, to its owner Ann Dawson. She is carrying a letter that proves her brother, who is on death row, is innocent and Jim Grant is the guilty party. Ted and Danny help her escape from Grant's henchmen. They have several narrow escapes while on their way to give the proof to the Governor.
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Ex-Flame (1930)
Character: Boggins
A woman's uncontrollable jealousy over her husband's former girlfriend results in her losing not only her house but her young son is taken away from her.
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The Marathon (1919)
Character: Snub
Boy trying to impress girl, gets chased by her father and the police right into an ongoing marathon.
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Beat It (1918)
Character: N/A
Harold Lloyd starred in the successful Lonesome Luke series. However, he soon grew tired of the obvious Charlie Chaplin imitation. In an attempt to reinvent himself, Lloyd donned a pair of horn-rimmed glasses, and thus, a new comedy legend was born. Setting himself against Chaplin, Lloyd's "glasses character" was an everyman, a resourceful go-getter who embodied the ambitious, success-seeking attitude of 1920s America.
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Sic 'Em, Towser (1918)
Character: N/A
At a masquerade ball, our hero, in a tramp costume, is arrested when they think he is a real hobo. In the meantime, an actual hobo, at the party, is treated like a guest.
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The Laramie Kid (1935)
Character: Cinvvict Shorty
When Morley has his own bank robbed, Tom tries to break it up. Mistaken for one of the gang, he is caught and sentenced to a chain gang. His girlfriend Peggy then sets out to prove his innocence.
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Limelight (1952)
Character: Street Musician
A fading music hall comedian tries to help a despondent ballet dancer learn to walk and to again feel confident about life.
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Boot Hill Bandits (1942)
Character: 2nd Bartender
Bolton's men blow up the wagon carrying the mine payroll and Marshal Crash Corrigan is supposedly killed in the explosion. A man finds his badge and gives it to Bolton. Thinking Crash dead, Bolton gives the badge away and it ends up with the Sheriff. Crash is OK and the Range Busters know Bolton is the head of the gang but that he gets his orders from someone else and that is the man they want.
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Adam's Rib (1949)
Character: Man in Courtroom (uncredited)
A woman's attempted murder of her uncaring husband results in everyday quarrels in the lives of Adam and Amanda, a pair of happily married lawyers who end up on opposite sides of the case in court.
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The City Slicker (1918)
Character: Snub
Our hero gets a job at a hotel in the country and proceeds to introduce some changes, installing gadgets and time-saving devices.
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The Man from Colorado (1948)
Character: Townsman (uncredited)
Two friends return home after their discharge from the army after the Civil War. However, one of them has had deep-rooted psychological damage due to his experiences during the war, and as his behavior becomes more erratic--and violent--his friend desperately tries to find a way to help him.
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Bliss (1917)
Character: Snub
A counterfeit count is aided in his courtship of the heroine by her father who is overwhelmed by his "title."
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Tinkering with Trouble (1915)
Character: Sourball Joe
Sourball Joe gets the "can" for sassing the tenants, and Easy Otis supplants him. But the latter does not know an awful lot of the art of "janitoring" and soon gets into many and various jams with the people upstairs.
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Two Scrambled (1918)
Character: N/A
Roomers in a boarding house break the rules and are caught cooking if their room. A frantic run-in with the landlady ensues.
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Singin' in the Rain (1952)
Character: Old Man Getting Umbrella in "Singin' in the Rain" Number (uncredited)
In 1927 Hollywood, a silent film production company and cast make a difficult transition to sound.
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Utah Trail (1938)
Character: Pee Wee
Tex and his sidekicks arrive to help out his friend Jeffers, a railroad owner, only to find that he has been killed. They quickly run into trouble with an outlaw gang in their attempt to find the mysterious ghost train that supposedly runs on Jeffer's line.
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The Oregon Trail (1959)
Character: Townsman (uncredited)
In 1846, a reporter for the New York Herald joins a wagon train bound for the Oregon Territory. He hopes to confirm a rumor that President Polk is sending in soldiers disguised as settlers in order to strengthen American claims to the Territory.
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Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
Character: Final Mail-Bearing Court Officer (uncredited)
Kris Kringle, seemingly the embodiment of Santa Claus, is asked to portray the jolly old fellow at Macy's following his performance in the Thanksgiving Day parade. His portrayal is so complete that many begin to question if he truly is Santa Claus, while others question his sanity.
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An Ozark Romance (1918)
Character: N/A
Harold visits the Ozarks, where he has some funny experiences with a mountain girl and her eccentric family.
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Badman's Territory (1946)
Character: Town Barber (uncredited)
After some gun play with a posse, the James Gang head for Quinto in a section of land which is not a part of America. Anyone there is beyond the law so the town is populated with outlaws. Next to arrive is Sheriff Rowley, following his brother whom the Gang have brought in injured. Rowley has no authority and gets on well enough with the James boys but is soon involved in other local goings-on, including a move to vote for annexation with Oklahoma which would allow the law well and truly in.
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One Good Turn (1931)
Character: A Community Player (uncredited)
Down and out Stan and Ollie beg for food from a friendly old lady who provides them with sandwiches. While eating, they overhear the lady's landlord tell her he's going to throw her out because she can't pay her mortgage. They don't realize that the old lady is really rehearsing for a play. Stan and Ollie decide to help the old lady by selling their car. During the auction a drunk puts a wallet in Stan's pocket. Ollie accuses Stan of robbing the old lady, but when the truth is revealed Stan takes revenge on Ollie.
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Road to Utopia (1946)
Character: Amateur Contest Violinist (uncredited)
While on a ship to Skagway, Alaska, Duke and Chester find a map to a secret gold mine, which had been 'stolen' by thugs. In Alaska to recover her father's map, Sal Van Hoyden falls in with Ace Larson, who secretly wants to steal the gold mine for himself. Duke, Chester, the thugs, Ace and his henchman chase each other all over the countryside—for the map.
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His Wedding Scare (1943)
Character: Fireman
El and his new bride go on their honeymoon; no matter where they go, they keep running into her former husbands.
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Who Was That Lady? (1960)
Character: Tattoo Artist (uncredited)
In order to get back into the good graces with his wife with whom he has had a misunderstanding, a young chemistry professor concocts a wild story that he is an undercover FBI agent. To help him with his story he enlists the aid of a friend who is a TV writer. The wife swallows the story and the film's climax takes place in the sub-basements of the Empire State Building. The professor and his friend, believing themselves prisoners on an enemy submarine, patriotically try to scuttle the vessel and succeed only in rocking the building.
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Kicking the Germ Out of Germany (1918)
Character: N/A
Our hero has a dream, while in the trenches at the front, that he is in Berlin rescuing a Red Cross nurse from the hands of the Kaiser and his henchmen.
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Never Touched Me (1919)
Character: Jelous Admirer
At the Killjoy Cafe, "everything is first class except the food and the service."
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Follow the Crowd (1918)
Character: N/A
A clueless man finds a bomb on the street and keeps throwing it to the crowd around him. The sketch then moves with the clueless nerd getting involved in all sorts of troubles until he accidentally gets into a hideout from a terrorist group that will complicate things for him more than he ever hoped.
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Back Trail (1948)
Character: Goofy (as Snub Pollard)
Back Trail is one of the livelier entries in Monogram's Johnny Mack Brown western series. Brown rides into a small town where he becomes embroiled in a blackmail scheme. The town's banker (Ted Adams), a pillar of respectability, once served a jail term. Outlaw leader Pierce Lyden threatens to reveal Adams' secret if the banker doesn't let him know in advance when the gold shipments are going through. Adams tearfully tells Brown the whole story, whereupon Johnny rides shotgun on the next shipment himself. Back Trail was one of the last films directed by workhorse Christy Cabanne, whose career stretched all the way back to the D.W. Griffith days.
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Mr. Celebrity (1941)
Character: Racetrack Spectator (uncredited)
A couple attempts to win custody of their orphaned grandson, who's being raised by his veterinarian uncle in a racetrack environment.
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Desperate (1947)
Character: Villager (uncredited)
An innocent trucker takes it on the lam when he's accused of robbery.
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The Payoff (1942)
Character: Stubby - Cab Driver (uncredited)
The city's District Attorney is murdered, and a newspaper reporter investigates. He starts finding out that everything wasn't quite as cut and dried as it appeared to be.
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Teacher's Pet (1958)
Character: Reporter (uncredited)
A rugged city editor poses as a journalism student and flirts with the professor.
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Inherit the Wind (1960)
Character: Townsman (uncredited)
Schoolteacher Bertram Cates is arrested for teaching his students Darwin's theory of evolution. The case receives national attention and one of the newspaper reporters, E.K. Hornbeck, arranges to bring in renowned defense attorney and atheist Henry Drummond to defend Cates. The prosecutor, Matthew Brady is a former presidential candidate, famous evangelist, and old adversary of Drummond.
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The Dutiful Dub (1919)
Character: N/A
Harold is a henpecked husband who suddenly makes a change of front and asserts himself, much to his wife's astonishment.
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Johnny Belinda (1948)
Character: Man on Jury (uncredited)
A small-town doctor helps a deaf-mute farm girl learn to communicate.
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Somewhere in Turkey (1918)
Character: His Assistant
Our hero, a professor in Turkey, challenges a Sultan for the affections of a girl.
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Master of the World (1961)
Character: Man at Balloon Society Meeting (uncredited)
A mad genius tries to bomb the world into peace.
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Framed (1947)
Character: (uncredited)
Truck driver Mike Lambert is a down-and-out mining engineer searching for a job. When his rig breaks down in a small town, he happens upon a venomous seductress. When her boyfriend robs a bank, they intend to frame Lambert.
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Luke Rides Roughshod (1916)
Character: N/A
Out west, Luke changes clothes with an outlaw and proceeds into town. Of course, he is mistaken for the wanted man and a chase ensues.
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Till the Clouds Roll By (1946)
Character: Show Boat Orchestra Drummer (uncredited)
Light bio-pic of American Broadway pioneer Jerome Kern, featuring renditions of the famous songs from his musical plays by contemporary stage artists, including a condensed production of his most famous: 'Showboat'.
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Riders of the Rockies (1937)
Character: Pee Wee McDougal
Tex and his pals join the Rangers to fight rustlers along the border. When Doc and Pee Wee get framed for rustling and then jailed, Tex deserts the Rangers, crosses the border, and joins up with the outlaw gang hoping somehow to clear his pals.
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Friendly Persuasion (1956)
Character: Carnival Patron (uncredited)
The story of a family of Quakers in Indiana in 1862. Their religious sect is strongly opposed to violence and war. It's not easy for them to meet the rules of their religion in everyday life but when Southern troops pass the area they are in real trouble. Should they fight, despite their peaceful attitude?
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Hail the Conquering Hero (1944)
Character: Townsman (uncredited)
Having been discharged from the Marines for a hayfever condition before ever seeing action, Woodrow Lafayette Pershing Truesmith delays the return to his hometown, feeling that he is a failure. While in a moment of melancholy, he meets up with a group of Marines who befriend him and encourage him to return home to his mother by fabricating a story that he was wounded in battle with honorable discharge.
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Look Out Below (1919)
Character: Snub
A story of a love sick youth and a pretty maiden and their adventure, which includes riding around on pieces of steel to the top of a skyscraper overlooking the Los Angeles streets.
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The Crime Patrol (1936)
Character: Gyp
Prizefighter Bob Neal (Ray Walker) is in debt to gangster Vic Santell (Hooper Atchley) for training expenses. Santell orders Bob to take a dive in the fourth round so Santell can recoup prior gambling losses. Taunted by his ring opponent, Bob wins the fight. Realizing that his profession and underworld characters connected to it are causing him problems, Bob decides to join the police force. After taking nurse Mary Prentiss (Geneva Mitchell) to a drive-in restaurant where the total bill is a depression-era cheap eighty-two cents, Bob and his fellow officers round-up a gang of fur thieves in a warehouse shoot-out.
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One More River (1934)
Character: George
A young lady leaves her brutal husband and meets another man on board a ship.
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Hannah Lee: An American Primitive (1953)
Character: Man Pacing in Jail Cell
Professional killer Bus Crow is hired by cattlemen to eliminate squatters. When Marshal Sam Rochelle is sent to investigate, saloon owner Hallie has to be a reluctant witness.
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Song of the Buckaroo (1938)
Character: 'Perky'
An outlaw on the run assumes the identity of a dead man. When in his new identity he finds himself elected the mayor of a small town, he decides to go straight.
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Hollywood Cavalcade (1939)
Character: Keystone Cop
Starting in 1913 movie director Connors discovers singer Molly Adair. As she becomes a star she marries an actor, so Connors fires them. She asks for him as director of her next film. Many silent stars shown making the transition to sound.
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Booby Dupes (1945)
Character: Ice Cream Vendor (uncredited)
The stooges are three fish peddlers who decide to cut out the middleman by catching their own fish. They trade their car and $300 for a "new" boat which turns out to be a piece of junk that soon falls apart and sinks in the middle of the ocean. Luckily the boys also have a row boat which they climb into and then try to signal some passing planes for help. Unfortunately, their paint spattered rag is mistaken for a Japanese flag and they are bombed from the sky.
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Soft Money (1919)
Character: N/A
Soft Money is a 1919 American short comedy film. The film is considered to be lost.
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Three Pests in a Mess (1945)
Character: Cemetery Guard (uncredited)
The stooges are three inventors trying to a get a patent on their preposterous fly catching invention. When they learn they'll have to catch 100,000 flies to earn enough to get a patent, some crooks overhear and think the boys are the $100,000 sweepstakes winners. When the crooks give chase, the stooges hide in a sporting goods store where Curly shoots a dummy, which they mistake for a real person. The boys decide to bury the "body" in a pet cemetery, but the cemetery owner arrives from a costume party with his partners, all dressed as spooks, and they proceed to scare the devil out of the stooges.
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Fireman Save My Child (1918)
Character: N/A
In this popular two reeler where Harold runs to the rescue of a woman on a fire engine, he is seen hanging on the moving vehicle by the released water hose that forces him closer to the ground.
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The Hoodlum Saint (1946)
Character: Parade Spectator (uncredited)
A former reporter comes back home after serving in the army during World War I and finds that it's much more difficult to find work than he expected. Desperate, one day he crashes a wedding attended by many of the city's rich and powerful, meets a beautiful girl named Kay who turns out to be his ticket to meeting those rich and powerful people, and he soon manages to land a job on a newspaper. He gets caught up in the "make money at all costs" game but receives a rude awakening when the stock market crashes in 1929.
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Unknown Island (1948)
Character: Extra in Dive, Pointing Out Tarnowski
Adventure-seeker Ted Osborne has convinced his finacee Carole to finance his expedition to an uncharted South Pacific island supposedly populated with dinosaurs...
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Kitty (1945)
Character: Hugh's Rental Coachman (uncredited)
Pickpocket Kitty's life changes when painter Thomas Gainsborough makes her portrait. The artwork gains the attention of Sir Hugh Marcy, who later decides to use her for his benefit.
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Frontier Town (1938)
Character: Peewee
Regan is passing off counterfeit money at rodeos betting on his man Denby. When Tex appears and wins all the events, Regan has him accused of murder. As Tex looks for the counterfeiters, his pals Stubby and Pee Wee keep the Sheriff off his trail.
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On the Fire (1919)
Character: The Assistant Chef
Harold is a chef with certain devices for labor saving.
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Confirm or Deny (1941)
Character: Air Raid Refugee in Basement Crowd
Newsman Mitch and teletype operator Jennifer, whose job is to see he doesn't send inappropriate stuff out of the country, dodge bombs during the blitz of London while falling in love.
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The Old West (1952)
Character: Townsman (uncredited)
Doc Lockwood and his gang are trying to take away Autry's contract for supplying horses to the stagecoach line. Parson Brooks joins Autry in an effort to clean up the town of Sadderlock.
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