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1-50 of 2,041
- A teenager takes on the mantle of his missing superhero father, hoping to find out what happened to him - learning what it means to be a hero along the way.
- Robert Ripley shows a visitor some of the more unusual and macabre items from his collection, as well as film of several people with odd or inspiring accomplishments.
- The complete DRAGONBALL Z saga, told in live action "sweded" filmmaking style, is finally together in an exciting alternate cut that blends all sagas (SAIYAN, FRIEZA, CELL, and BUU) together into one complete story.
- In this Community Sing (Columbia production number 3656, which they used again years later for those attempting to make sense of Columbia production numbers), Don Baker (IX)(who was in films before and made more movies than Don Bakers I through VIII, but is relagated to being the ninth Don Baker) plays four songs on the organ, including "Who Threw the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy's Chowder", while the audience is asked to follow the Bouncing Ball and sing along. Most didn't.
- In this "Flickers Flashback" series of shorts (number one of the 1947-48 production season) Richard Fleischer chops up two silent films---both by editing and commentary---in the usual parody-burlesque fashion of this series aimed at gaining laughs at the expense of silent films originally intended as dramas. Since the running time of these shorts was ten minutes, and the original running time of the silent films used was also about ten minutes, or one reel, then close to half of the original footage was used. "Flicker Flashbacks" might be a good place to look for parts of "lost" silents. The two used here are "The Last Deal", a 1910 Biograph film directed by D. W. Griffith, that featured Owen Moore as a family man about to lose everything due to his gambling addiction; and a 1911 IMP production directed by Thomas H. Ince, "Behind the Stockade," in which Mary Pickford and Owen Moore (again) are starred in a film set on an African jungle plantation, with a stockade, a setting that pretty well disclaims the Western genre attributed to this film.
- This Columbia Screen Snapshots (number 5 for the 1946-47 production year with a production number of 8855) finds Staub and his camera paying (undeserved) homage to the radio and print-media gossip columnists of the era, including the unforgettable (not to mention you-gotta-be-kidding) Louella "Lolly" Parsons and Hedda "The Hat" Hopper.
- Excerpts from 'Caught by Wireless' (1908) and 'Eldora, the Fruit Girl' (1911) are ridiculed by a wisecracking narrator for the entertainment of 1948 audiences.
- Andy Clyde plays football with the Sennett girls; Mary Pickford's miniature golf course is shown.
- Excerpts from D.W. Griffith's 'For a Wife's Honor' (1908), and the Harry Houdini serial, 'The Master Mystery' (1920) are ridiculed by a wisecracking commentator for the entertainment of enlightened 1948 audiences; last of the series.
- Line of Duty (2012) creator Jed Mercurio releases bloopers in aid of the Asks For Masks charity.
- The camera turns on the many Hollywood personalities doing their own sculpting, sketching and/or painting. The Three Stooges collaborate on a painting, and end up covered in paint.
- Clips from very early and primitive silent melodramas are edited and narrated for laughs.
- Blu-ray bonus feature about "The Six Million Dollar Man".
- Excerpts from D.W. Griffith's 'The Criminal Hypnotist' (1909), and another film, The Innkeeper's Daughter (1910) are ridiculed by an inanely unfunny commentator for the entertainment of enlightened 1948 audiences.
- Excerpts from 'Victims of Fate (1912) and 'A Cadet's Honor' (1913) are ridiculed by an inanely unfunny commentator for the entertainment of enlightened 1948 audiences.
- Gene Morgan is the riverboat master of ceremonies in this Columbia sing-along short with Donald Grayson singing the songs that include: "Dixie", "Carry Me Back To Old Virginny", "Are You From Dixie", "Carolina in the Morning", "My Old Kentucky Home" and "Mammy."
- Stars are seen at the Father and Sons barbecue and the laying of the cornerstone of Bing Crosby's Delmar Racetrack; Fredric March receives a giant postcard; Anita Stewart shows home movies of past stars.
- Excerpts from D.W. Griffith's 'Saved from Himself' (1911) and Alice Guy Blaché's 'Never Too Late to Mend' (1911) are ridiculed by an inanely unfunny commentator for the entertainment of enlightened 1947 audiences.