Unfinished: Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle, worst to best
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- DirectorJoseph HenaberyStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleBetty Ross ClarkeFrank HollandTraveling salesman Bob Blake finds himself at a railroad junction instead of his intended destination through a practical joke played on him by two drummer friends, and he spends the night in an unoccupied house up for sale. In Grand River he falls in love with its owner, Beth Elliott. Politician Martin Drury conspires with her suitor, Franklin, to buy the property cheaply, knowing it is wanted by the railroad, but Bob beats him to the sale and pays the taxes. Beth, thinking Bob has deceived her, accepts their offer, but when he learns that a wife's signature is invalid without the assent of her husband they get married, thus checkmating the schemers.
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleAl St. JohnMolly MaloneThe Sheriff is a "desert hero," so lucky as never to get a scratch amid all the shooting, such a remarkable shot himself that he hits the cuckoo in a clock and causes it to drop into a glass of beer below, converting it to a cocktail. He thwarts all the villains, foils all the plots, rescues the persecuted maiden, destroys the bar, closes the dance hall, and is instrumental in converting a long line of hardened gunmen to lives of usefulness as members of the Salvation Army.
- DirectorMack SennettStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleIrene WallaceCharles AveryRoscoe writes of his love and announces that he will call on Irene with the ring and ask her parents' consent to their marriage. Father and Mother are willing, but decide to give Roscoe a scare before accepting him for a son-in-law. Father assumes a gruff attitude but melts at the right time and Roscoe departs in high glee to prepare for a masked ball at which the engagement is to be announced. Irene jokes him about his size but he warns her that he will fool her by the mystery of his disguise. On the way home in his automobile Roscoe drives over a cliff and is taken to a hospital. There he is, out of his mind, as the guests begin to assemble at the ball. At about this time, however, a well-fed tramp is put to work in the kitchen by the cook, who is short of help and has a large party to feed. Irene wanders into the kitchen and immediately singles out the tramp as her Roscoe. The stranger permits himself to be led to the buffet and later does a dance for the guests. One of the professional dancers is a crook, whose companion robs as she entertains. But he bungles a job and is caught. Before he bounds away from his pursuers after slipping the necklace to his confederate. At this point the real Roscoe arrives, clad in a hospital nightshirt. He has awakened to find himself surrounded by beautiful nurses but has fled at the suggestion of an operation. He leads the chase after the woman while the tramp is buffeted about during the pursuit of the man through the grounds. Weary from his exertions, the tramp sits down near a gutter spout just as Roscoe breaks into the room above. To avoid being caught with the goods, the woman crook drops the necklace down the spout. The tramp picks it up and gets the reward. As the returned Roscoe is being warmly welcomed by Irene, his double and his pal Joe split 50-50 on the reward and head for the nearest restaurant.
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMabel NormandWilliam JeffersonThe manager of a small town hotel installs a cabaret in an attempt to achieve the standard set by restaurants in the large cities. His effort is ludicrous because of the fact that his talent is all recruited from the help in the hotel. Roscoe, the cook, is forced to appear in a dress suit and when Al St. John appears from the bar there is a lively rivalry between the two for the applause of the crowd. Mabel, the waitress, vies with a professional dancer from the city. Into this setting comes William Jefferson, a polished sharper, who takes the innocent Mabel by storm. She listens with open mouth to his stories of life in the metropolis and willingly leaves the village with him. Roscoe, who has been mildly in love with the waitress, realizes what her fate is likely to be and starts in pursuit. His search takes him to the Bowery just as an old sailor is being thrown out of a dive. From the sailor Roscoe learns that Mabel is inside, practically a prisoner and forced to associate with thugs and the women of the resort. He plans a heroic rescue, but when his purpose becomes known he is promptly bounced. Meanwhile the sailor has returned with reinforcements. Led by the persistent Roscoe they storm the resort. There is a free-for-all fight, in the course of which Roscoe throws a member of the gang through a solid brick wall. This loosens the foundations and a shoe shop and Chinese laundry above drop into the dive. Mabel is found in an inner room, which she is only too glad to leave to return to the country with "Fatty."
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleRaymond HitchcockFlora ZabelleHitchcock comes to a small town, where the chickens and pigs run about the streets as numerous as the people. His purpose is to amuse and entertain the populace by wonderful feats of magic and sleight-of-hand. His plans are all set awry by his sudden infatuation for Flora Zabelle, who plays the hotel waitress and sweetheart of Fatty Arbuckle. Everything was going lovely for Fatty till then. Miss Zabelle was very affectionate and the corpulent one was so fond and foolish that he lavished two years' savings on her adornment, and also put himself in debt for another two years. His ladylove then turned him down cold for the more elegant appearing Hitchcock. When the pair went upstairs to regale themselves with song and organ music, the grief of Fatty Arbuckle was "running over." Little streams of water would every now and then shoot from his eyes and his enormously fat features would work convulsively. The landlady couldn't stand the sight of such appalling grief. She came up armed with a handkerchief determined to soothe the woes of Arbuckle and wipe away his tears. She was nearly drowned by the torrents that came from the grief-stricken Fatty and though persistent had to retreat in as good order as her drenched condition would permit. A very fancy exhibition of "sword-swallowing" was given by Al St. John, as one of the boarders. He gracefully more or less was devouring beans with the aid of a knife. This was the opportunity of the genteel Hitchcock to show his elegant manners. He calls the attention of the boarder to himself and almost swallows the knife literally. This opens the eyes of the rest and they watch him closely and curiously as he then shows the proper way to do the thing. He takes up his fork loaded to the guards with beans and is so intent on watching the effect on those around him that he spills them all over his waistcoat. The hilarity of the boarder is especially mirth-provoking as he has a somewhat clownish outfit and makeup.
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
- DirectorMack SennettStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMabel NormandMack SwainFatty, his wife and mother-in-law are on a ferry to Catalina Island for an outing. So are Mabel and her father. Mabel and Fatty flirt with each other, and Fatty tosses her father overboard, thinking he is another suitor. The boat docks and the two go their separate ways. Mack Swain tries to pick Mabel up, too. All go to rent bathing suits, Fatty locks Mack in a dressing room with mother-in-law. Fatty and Mabel feed a large fish to a seal at the water's edge, and then engage in some graceful and comic diving. Swain, Avery, Durfee and Davenport see them diving and corner them...everyone's relationship to each other is revealed.
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMabel NormandSyd ChaplinIn need of money, Fatty borrows a dollar from a friend who is waiting to take his girlfriend Mabel to a party. As Fatty walks off with his dollar he sees Mabel in the distance. Mabel also sees him, and rushes to his side and kisses him for he is very popular with the ladies. All this is seen by the man who has lent Fatty the dollar and two friends of his. They also see Fatty and Mabel disappear into a restaurant, though Fatty, due to his shortness of funds, is reluctant to go. Once inside, however, the amusing antics of the waiter (Charles Chaplin) dispel his gloom until he sees his three friends arriving. They order wine, then disappear, leaving a bill of $27.50 for Fatty to pay. Unable to do so, be is kicked out, to his friends' amusement, but just when they're laughing hardest, Mabel takes his side and turns the tables on them.
- DirectorMorgan WallaceStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
- DirectorMack SennettStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
- DirectorMack SennettStarsFord SterlingDot FarleyGeorge Nichols
- DirectorHenry LehrmanStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleNick Cogley
- DirectorGeorge NicholsStarsFord SterlingRoscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
- DirectorWilfred LucasStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
- DirectorGeorge NicholsStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbucklePhyllis AllenMinta DurfeeFatty induces wife to let him take a day off to go to the celebration at San Diego. He has a wonderful time, flirting with the girls, breaking up a parade, fighting the police force and falling into the fountain with him, escapes, and with the crowd after him, leaps into the river. Here he rescues a little boy and becomes a hero. He goes home to wife in a bedraggled condition, tells of rescue and is set upon a pedestal. Wife, as a reward, takes him to the movies at night and sees husband flirting and fighting in the fountain, where some enterprising cameraman caught him. That explaining, as she thought, the bedraggled state in which he arrived home, she turns and beats him all the way home.
- DirectorWilfred LucasStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMinta DurfeeCharles InsleeThe scene is laid for a quiet little wedding. The guests are waiting for Fatty and an ancient maid to be made one. Fatty's rival appears and breaks up the wedding. A lemon meringue pie battle ensues, with the rival the victor. He carries the bride away. A most sensational and ludicrous finish is when he sees Fatty at the foot of a precipitous cliff. In a fit of rage he throws the bride from the top of the cliff at him, who lands unscathed in Fatty's arms.
- DirectorHenry LehrmanStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleNick CogleyGeorge JeskeTwo old tars, retired from service, live alone in a cottage by the sea. They sail along on an even keel, until a buxom and comely widow projects herself on the scene when one old tar breaks one of their unwritten laws and falls in love with her. The other old fellow objects strenuously.
- DirectorMack SennettStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMabel NormandCharles InsleeWhen a girl delivering expensive garments loses them to some Irish shanty town kids,her boss, a Jewish clothier, is livid and a fight breaks out.Soon the mêlée spreads to the whole neighborhood with brick throwing merging into bomb throwing, with the sides on clearly ethnic lines. The Keystone cops find things too much for their efforts to stop it, so firemen and a bayonet-charging squad of soldiers are called into the fray.
- DirectorAl ChristieStarsDonald MacDonaldRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleIrene HuntMay and Maud Smith are two sisters living in a hall room at Mrs. Prune's. They are out of work and very despondent. So is Jimmie, who occupies the room next to the girls. They are all delinquent in their board bill, and Jimmie tries to steal up to his room without the landlady seeing him, but Mrs. Prune comes out and demands her rent. Jimmie shows her a letter that he has prospects of a job, but she wants her money and refuses to allow him in the dining room, until he has paid. He goes to his room and on the way meets the two girls, who were fortunate enough to have had enough money to pay part of their board and thus entitled to a meal, at least. The girls attempt to smuggle Jimmie into the dining room, but the untimely appearance of Mrs. Prune frustrates their plan. Jimmie is sitting in his room, disconsolate and hungry, when he hears voices in the adjoining room. He listens at the door and hears one of the girls exclaim, "Here is a way out of our difficulties," and then, "It's the only way. Let us dye together." Jimmie does not stop for more, but rushes away for help. And in the meantime, the girls had been reading an advertisement in the newspaper, a want ad, which calls for "two sisters for vaudeville; must have blonde hair, etc.," and which brought forth the remarks Jimmie had heard. They decide it is their last hope to relieve their pressing need of money. Jimmie fails to find a policeman so rushes to a detective agency and informs Hawkeye, the detective, that two girls are about to commit suicide. Jimmie and Hawkeye, with the latter's "fussies." Watch the house, see one of the girls come out and follow her to a drug store. They are convinced she has gone to buy the poison. Hawkeye sends Jimmie for a doctor, while he and his men follow the girl back to the house. Jimmie arrives about the same time with the doctor, and they all enter the house and creep upstairs to the girls' door. When they burst into the room, they find the girls dying their hair. Explanations ensue, and the disgusted detective leaves with a glaring look from his "Hawkeye" meant to whither the frightened Jimmie.
- DirectorMack SennettStarsFord SterlingEdgar KennedyRaymond Hatton
- DirectorMack SennettStarsFord SterlingMack SennettWilliam Hauber
- DirectorMack SennettStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMabel NormandFord SterlingLouis, the chef and Oscar, the head waiter, are in love with Mabel the pretty cashier. The Waiters' picnic is held, and Mabel is the cause of much trouble between Louis and Oscar. Mabel accidentally falls over a high bank and Louis, in attempting to rescue her, falls over too. Oscar and the other picnickers rush to the scene, and by means of a human rope pull Mabel up. Louis is left to his fate but by superhuman efforts manages to near the top, when Oscar pushes him back again. That night the headwaiter makes things as unpleasant as possible for the chef, and the latter retaliates by sending out some weird concoctions from his kitchen, causing the patrons to heap maledictions upon Oscar. The methods of the chef in handling the victuals are comically shown and will cause oceans of laughter. The chef finally decides to gain a terrible revenge by killing his rival, so he prepares a seemingly appetizing dish, which is liberally sprinkled with poison. It looks so good that the headwaiter presents it to Mabel, who is about to go home and she wraps a napkin about it and goes out. Louis waits until the poison shall have taken effect and then enters the dining room to gaze at his dead enemy. He is surprised to see Oscar serenely walking about, and when he learns what has occurred he bolts for the door and rushes madly down the street. Police and pedestrians attempt to stop the supposed mad man, but he bowls over every one in his path and continues on his flight, pursued by a howling mob. He arrives at Mabel's home in time to prevent the family eating the poisoned food, and then falls into the hands of Oscar who administers a well merited heating.
- DirectorHenry LehrmanStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleBeatrice VanNick CogleyThe professor does not approve of his daughter's suitor. His disapproval is so marked that it is finally noticed by said swain, Tim Brown, when he is kicked out of the house by the father of his lady love, and he resolves to be careful in the future and not be subjected to further indignities. The Professor has been experimenting with germs, and discovers some new and deadly ones which he exhibits to some of his medical friends. The germs have been raised in a culture of milk, and when the professor escorts his guests to the door the milk bottle and the cup are left on the table. Unfortunately, Tim Brown seized this particular moment to make a call on his lady love, accompanied by his dog, making his entrance through an open window. The dog is thirsty, so he innocently pours more milk into the cup and gives it to the animal. The professor, returning, sees what is taking place, and crying, "The dog is full of deadly germs," runs away. The dog, attracted by the queerly acting, screaming man, runs after him, and soon there is tremendous excitement, half the town running with the Professor, and the others running after him and the dog. After many narrow escapes from the deadly teeth of the dog, the professor finally reaches a place of safety.
- DirectorHenry LehrmanStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleBeatrice VanCharles AveryHenry is a big, fat country boy with three passions. He likes eggs, milk and girls. He steals the eggs from the nests, sucks their contents, and refills the shells with water. When the family sit down to breakfast and the shells are broken the crime is discovered and Farmer Jones places a big bear trap, covered with straw, in front of the nests, Henry sees this done, however, and says nothing. Henry weighs about 250 pounds. The Jones cow, Loretta, seems suddenly to have gone dry. Of course Henry does not tell them that he has been making secret visits to Loretta with a cup. Henry is in love with Jenny Brown. Si Black is also enamored of the fair Jenny. Si only weighs about 102 pounds, and when the rivals become engaged in a physical conflict it looks dark for Si until he practices a new kind of Ju-jitsu on the stomach of his foe. For the nonce, Henry accepts defeat, but turns the tables on Si when he lures him to the concealed bear trap and pushes him onto it. The jaws close upon poor Si's legs, and Henry calls every one to come and see the captured egg thief.
- DirectorHenry LehrmanStarsFred MaceMack SennettDot FarleyMurphy, the cop, gives his I. O. U. to the money-lender. Pressed for payment, he gives up his wife's jewelry. She thinks she has been robbed and reports the matter to the police lieutenant. Amusing complications result in which Murphy's duplicity is exposed, and his wife administers punishment for his offense.
- StarsErnest AndersonRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleA young man promised his bride-to-be that they would make their future home with her dear good mamma. "All's well that Ends Well" but the soft gliding running gear of true love soon begins receiving jolts, and finally the young husband packs bag and baggage and retires peacefully to the turpentine camp to work and forget his rash promises. A telegram summons him home quick, a new arrival. In his anxiety to reach the turbulent home, he encounters obstacles at every turn but finally succeeds, where we see him a happy fond father.
- StarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleNick CogleyJones is sick and a friend tells him he should go to a sanitarium and recommends Dr. Crow's Retreat. Accordingly Jones bids his wife good-bye and is off for his health, arrives and is received by Dr. Crow who promises great things. He is assured that he is in a very serious condition and must diet and train down, is shown his room, is disguised and writes his wife as follows: "Dr. Crow's Bug House. Dear Wife, This is no place for me; this is a dippy factory. I tried to leave but they won't let me out. I am to diet and train down; I can see my finish now. Farewell, Willie." Watching his chance, he makes his escape. Arriving at the quiet, peaceful home of the Joneses, he writes the Doctor the following touching testimonial: "Dear Dr. Crow, Your institution is a wonderful benefit to mankind. If ever I have an enemy who is seeking health, I will take great pleasure in recommending him to try your nut college. Affectionately, Jones."
- StarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMiss Van Astorbilt is a widow lady with a retinue of servants. he has long promised one of her cousins, a large youth who lives on a farm near Lonesomhurst, L.I., to have him visit her in her New York home. The long expected day arrives. We see Reuben receive a telegram: "Dear Cousin, call down at 3, and we will make it pleasant for you." But Miss Van Astorbilt is called away. The servants are instructed to act for her. This does not suit the servants, as they are preparing for the yearly Housemaids' Masquerade; they resent Reuben's intrusion, but decide to obey Madame and make it pleasant for him. And they do.
- StarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleNick CogleyIt was the anniversary of his wife's birth, and she, womanlike, did not fail to impress the fact upon her husband's mind as he departed at his usually early hour for his customary day's work. A bit excited over the prospect of presenting his better half with a gift befitting the occasion, he loses his balance as he steps out of the front door and rolls pell-mell down a flight of six steps to the street. Picking himself up, he boards a street car, and arriving at his office he goes through his daily routine of business. At the close of office hours he repairs to John Post & Co.'s crockery establishment, and after much cogitation and repeated questioning, purchases a rather handsome jardinière. Delighted with his choice and anticipating the caress he will receive in return, he again takes a car, this time for home. As he seats himself be is accosted by an old friend. After a reminiscent talk Jones arrives at his destination and alights, forgetting his jardinière. The car speeds on. Poor Jones, recovering his wits and realizing that he dare not return home without some token, betakes himself to the same store and purchases another jardinière. Again en route to his car, while passing a grocery store Jones is hailed by another old acquaintance. In the good fellowship of this accidental meeting, Jones absentmindedly places his wife's present on the rear end of the grocery wagon nearby. Thereupon the driver departs with his wagon and is out of sight before Jones realizes what has occurred. He gives chase, but to no avail. He glances nervously at his watch. Exasperated and overheated, he rushes back to the store, and to the amazement of the proprietor purchases his third jardinière. This time he is determined to get safely home; no friend shall balk his way. His car is in sight, when his attention is attracted by a heated altercation between a lady and a taxicab driver, she claiming that she is being overcharged. Now Jones was ever of a chivalrous tendency, and, upon being requested to decide the dispute, proceeds to do so, after first placing his precious parcel on the sidewalk near the cab. A few words, and with a satisfied feeling of having accomplished an heroic deed, Jones reaches for his jardinière, but to his consternation finds that the chauffeur has mistaken it for the property of the occupant of the taxicab, and jardinière and taxicab were "over the hills and far away." Half-crazed with his repeated misfortunes, he rushes back to the same store. The clerk is dumbfounded at the reappearance of this monomaniac on jardinières, but sells him another. Poor Jones, his very soul distorted by his anticipated reception of a late arrival home on this eventful day, dashes madly for his car, when he is startled by a woman who clutches him, not fondly, but too strongly, and screams into his ears "For God's sake, help me; my husband is killing my mother!" Much against his will, unfortunate Mr. Jones is urged into an apartment house. Inside the house he finds himself battling for life, while he is chased madly around the room by a fiend incarnate, who wields an ax with a dexterity so accurate that Jones decidedly disapproves of accuracy. The woman and her mother flee from the house while he, poor man, makes a hurried departure, smashing his jardinière and screaming anathemas on all birthdays. Bruised, tattered and heartsick, be again slowly wends his way to the now so familiar store. "Another of the same kind, please." he meekly requests, he at last gets on a car safely. The car is crowded. A workman enters carrying a package, places it next to that of Jones' jardinière, and he takes a seat beside our friend. At last Jones reaches his destination, and. grabbing the wrong parcel, alights. He enters his dining-room, much relieved, and. inscribing a loving message to his wife, he places it beside what he believes to be his well-earned jardinière. Calling Mrs. Jones, he points with pride to his gift. She embraces him fondly, after reading his words of affection, truly meant but unfortunately so inappropriate. For as she discloses the article so carefully wrapped, lo and behold! it is a workingman's teapot, black with soot. Poor Mrs. Jones, expectant all day, resents what she considers a practical joke, and belabors her husband with words well-nigh unspeakable, and leaves the room, vowing that henceforth he is no husband of hers and that she will return to her mother, never again to be called wife by such as Jones. He, amazed and crestfallen, and disgruntled with the world and himself, swears that birthdays should never exist.
- DirectorMack SennettStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMack SennettFord SterlingThis early Keystone has Pete spying on his neighbor's wife through one of those little knotholes in a fence. The neighbor (Sterling) notices and chases him all over town with sheriff and family close behind. Fatty Arbuckle plays the peeper's wife(!).
- DirectorMack SennettStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleNick CogleyFord SterlingWilly is a rather effeminate young man, and is abused by the town bully. He suspects that the bully is a coward at heart, so disguises himself as a bandit and shoots up the town. Everybody, including the sheriff, flees in terror, and their consternation is ludicrous when they discover that the terrible bandit is none other than harmless Willy.
- DirectorWilfred LucasStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMabel NormandFord SterlingAction scenes of early automobile racing highlight this story of Papa's efforts to thwart Mabel's romantic infatuation with a race car driver.
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMabel NormandAl St. JohnFatty is in love with the girl next door, but her father does not approve. When another suitor challenges for her affection, chaos ensues.
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleNorma NicholsAl St. JohnFatty is sitting on a park bench lost to the world in a perusal of "Three Weeks." Mabel waits till father falls asleep, then she goes to see what Fatty is so absorbed in. They share the book between them. A suitor, upon whom Mabel does not smile, wakes father, points out to him the two figures on the bench, and enlightens him as to what they are reading. They attack Fatty as a corrupter of innocence. He gives them back their medicine with a vengeance. Then he and Mabel dive off a high bridge into the river, climb out, and seating themselves comfortably on the opposite bank, go on with their story.
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMinnie DevereauxMinta DurfeeFatty steals a ride on a train, discovered, and put off in the middle of nowhere. He stumbles along over the hot desert and finally passes out. A very plump Indian woman finds him and takes him to her tepee, woos him and finally, in desperation, Fatty agrees to marry her. While the tribe is preparing for the marriage ceremony, Fatty attempts to escape but is caught.
- DirectorRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleHarold LloydJoe BordeauxWhen a rich 'mothball magnate' checks into a hotel with his family, the mashers come out of the woodwork to woo his daughter (Arbuckle.) The scene shifts to the beach where the buxom heiress becomes stranded on a rock, where she is sunbathing, when the tide comes in. An hilarious rescue effort ensues.
- DirectorMack SennettStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMabel NormandMack SennettThe new school teacher fresh from the city struggles with her unruly bumpkin students, while she awaits the arrival of her fiancé.
- DirectorMack SennettStarsEdward DillonFred MaceMarguerite MarshPercy and Harold are rivals, and both take the objects of their affections for an outing. Each tries to win the girl from the other, but while they quarrel another young man escorts her into the surf. Each blames the other for the affair, and during the argument Percy pushes Harold from the pier into the water. Harold at once conceives the idea of making Percy imagine he has committed murder by remaining out of sight under the pier. The imaginary crime almost drives Percy insane. What a relief he experiences when he sees that his friend turns up very much alive.
- DirectorMack SennettStarsMabel NormandRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleEdgar KennedyFatty rescues Mabel twice: first, from the unwelcome attentions of a masher, then from a runaway observation balloon.
- DirectorMack SennettStarsMabel NormandRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleMack SennettLong after jilting his girlfriend, Mabel the kitchen maid, Mack is startled to see her onscreen at the local cinema.
- DirectorHenry LehrmanStarsFord SterlingCharles AveryVirginia KirtleyTwo groundskeepers at a park expand their rivalry over trash to a romantic rivalry over a pretty park visitor. When a little girl goes missing, who better to find her than the Keystone Cops?
- DirectorGeorge NicholsStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleCharles AveryLou BreslowAfter rescuing the Police Commissioner's daughter from drowning, Fatty is rewarded with a position on the force, but soon finds that the job isn't all it's cracked up to be.
- DirectorGeorge NicholsStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleFrank CooleyMinta DurfeeA woman's husband runs into trouble when he flirts with the wrong "girl".
- DirectorMack SennettStarsCharles ChaplinFord SterlingRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleOut of costume, Charlie is a clean-shaven dandy who, somewhat drunk, visits a dance hall. There the wardrobe girl has three rival admirers: the band leader, one of the musicians, and now Charlie.
- DirectorGeorge NicholsStarsCharles ChaplinRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbucklePeggy PearceA very plastered fella follows a pretty woman home, and proceeds to make a nuisance of himself.
- DirectorCharles ChaplinStarsCharles ChaplinRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleChester ConklinCharlie is an actor in a film studio. He messes up several scenes and is tossed out. Returning dressed as a lady, he charms the director. Even so, Charlie never makes it into film, winding up at the bottom of a well.
- DirectorCharles ChaplinStarsCharles ChaplinCharley ChasePeggy PageA nephew takes his wheelchair-bound uncle and sweetheart to the park, where he meets the Little Tramp. The Tramp knows a money-making opportunity when he sees one.
- DirectorMack SennettStarsRoscoe 'Fatty' ArbuckleEdgar KennedyCharles ChaplinTo show his girl how brave he is Fatty challenges the champion to a fight. Charlie referees, trying to avoid contact with the two monsters.