Humor

The complete film of "Wheels Of Progress" can be found at: http://www.archive.org/details/Wheelsof1927

Camera is positioned as if in the audience at a vaudeville or burlesque show. Two men with long hair and beards in rough clothing appear to be eating and talking in a box on the left as a female aerialist sits on a trapeze over the stage and its painted backdrop of trees. Fully dressed in street clothing, the trapezist removes her jacket and hat before performing a flip. She stands to remove her skirt and then sits back down on the bar as she takes off her corset and throws it to the country bumpkins in the box, who fight over the undergarment.

made over 2 weeks, scripted, directed, shooting and mostly edited by me. An adaptation of Chaucer's Franklins Tale from his Canterbury Tales. Done to the style of a silent film. an incomplete work. the editing of this is not my own, it was reworked without my concent by a third party and the orginal no longer exists.

A mash of the prelinger archives and a few other sources, brought together with a totally incoherent voiceover and the fine music of Earl Oliver.

Any little girl that's a nice little girl (1930). A cat in a tophat is looking for a girlfriend this cartoon Star's Kitty lulu Belle/bell who isnt Betty Boop. Betty Boop can be seen in the backround & various pictures in this Cartoon (for example the girl with the bows in her hair).

Betty Boop Any Rags? (1932). Betty's voice is provided by Mae Questel. Any Rags, though her look & in general her character was now set. She'd truly & officially be called Betty Boop soon in that same year in Boop-oop-a-doop (1932).

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