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Hungry Kook Goes Bazook, The

Date produced: 1968

Filmmaker(s):

Ed V. McWatters

Description:

"The Hungry Kook Goes Bazook is a zany title and zaniness continues throughout the film. This is a motion picture one would think could not be made. Even after you have seen it, you wonder whether this was a film with real live people in it or just another cartoon. Ed McWatters simply stole a cartoon and made it with real live people; that's how simple it is" PSA Journal, Oct. 1968, 48-49.


Hunting

Date produced: 1937

Filmmaker(s):

Cyrus Pinkham

Description:

"Hunting, cast of "Boy," played by Winthrop Rolfe, and "Dog," played by Teddy. Boy, walks with Dog through the forested mountainside, gazes at views over the alley, drinks water from a rushing stream, and kneels to shoot at birds." Notes by (NHF) Chris Reed and Chris Castiglia, June 2013


Hunting Dalli Sheep

Date produced: 1932

Filmmaker(s):

V. A. Morgan

Description:

A film record of V. A. Morgan's hunt of Dall sheep in Alaska, 1931.


Hunting Scenes

Date produced: 1947

Filmmaker(s):

John Hindley

Description:

"Scenes before a hunt in Gisburn village of the riders and hounds waiting to set off, showing John and Harold Hindley mounted. Also stable scenes at the Ribblesdale Arms, Gisburn, including Rosemary and Valerie saddling their ponies. The hunt out and about on country lanes and riding across fields at Worston, near Clitheroe. John Hindley and daughter Val sitting by the fireside in 1947. A Pony Club Rally on Gisburn Park estate. Hunter Trials, possibly at Gisburn. Lawn Meet of Pendle Forest and Craven Hunt at Gisburn Park. Interior scenes of guests at the buffet, before the hunt moves off in frosty weather." (NWFA Online Archive)


Hunting With a Camera Instead of a Gun

Date produced: 1934

Filmmaker(s):

B. Fredric de Vries

Description:

"B. Fredric de Vriew of Rochester, N. Y., for his picture 'Hunting With a Camera Instead of a Gun.' This picture was made practically in its entirety at the zoo." American Cinematographer, Feb. 1936, 73.


Hydrogen Peroxide

Date produced: 1937

Filmmaker(s):

Henry Bulleid

Description:

"Amateur filmmaker, cinema historian and railway engineer H.A.V. Bulleid presents the tale of Percival Pond, keen stamp collector and single man looking for marriage. Together with his dog Pliny, Percy is seeking his ideal woman. After his efforts to persuade a girl he is dating to dye her hair blonde fail miserably, even going so far as to post her a bottle of Hydrogen Peroxide, Percy meets Madeleine. Percy then continues his fetishistic quest with his new beau. At the Pond family home, Percy voyeuristically watches Madeleine pass a series of character tests, unwittingly for her. Percy scores her actions and traits on a character chart. After a death-defying drive in Madeleine's break-less car, which she handles coolly, and eating asparagus with the family, Madeleine passes the tests and is rewarded with an offer of marriage" (EAFA Database).


Hypnotic Driving School

Date produced: 1970

Filmmaker(s):

Charles E. Phillips

Description:

"Film begins with the promotion of a driving school that states that you can get your licence after one lesson. The woman who signs up for the class goes through an hypnosis-like experience. She ends up in an accident only to learn that the 'school has absolutely no responsibility for accidents.' " Archives of Ontario.


I Am A Fugitive From A Sane Gang

Date produced: 1933

Filmmaker(s):

Henry Bulleid

Description:

"On board the Cambridge Express, René Gade - 'Fresh from France' - travels to meet his cousin, a Cambridge don. To pass the journey, he gazes from the train window and puffs on his cigarette. Meanwhile, amidst the magnificent surrounds of King's College Cambridge, Gade's cousin - U. Wood, BA - is hard at work in the Old Lodge. Arriving at Cambridge, Gade disembarks from the train with a stumble. Later, with his car broken down on a country lane, Gade argues with the driver. A fiendish-looking passer-by offers to help, but steals the car. Nonplussed, Gade and the driver continue their journey on foot. Elsewhere, Archibald - the 'Archduke of Piffleheim' - is locked in an embrace with a young women, only to be startled by the appearance of Hecuba Brown, 'a pretty taking wench'. Succumbing to Brown's allure, he dumps his girl by pulling her leg (literally). Meanwhile, Gade and his driver spot a pair of young ladies walking down the lane. Following close behind, the pair make their move, grabbing a girl each and heading off in opposite directions" (EAFA Database).


I Walked a Crooked Trail

Date produced: 1950

Filmmaker(s):

O. L. Tapp

Description:

"In I Walked a Crooked Trail, O. L. Tapp has lured a good deal of motion and humor out of what must be one of the world's most static subjects — the Arches National Monument. Remembering that story interest is an important part of cinematics, Mr. Tapp has kept his very competent camera trained on continuous human action, letting his travelog unwind itself, very subtly, as a background. The film is limited by the essential triviality of its theme — the unfolding of a practical joke. But within its limits it does very well indeed." Movie Makers, Dec. 1950, 467-468.


I’d Be Delighted To!

Date produced: 1932

Filmmaker(s):

S. Winston Childs

Description:

"I'd Be Delighted To!, directed and photographed by S. Winston Childs, jr., ACL, is that kind of production often planned but seldom made — a film story told entirely in closeups. Presenting the simple incident of a dinner a deux in a gentleman's apartment, the picture runs through 400 feet of brilliantly chosen, strikingly filmed, significant closeups. It is adroit, amusing and sophisticated, and a splendid example of what, with skill and care, can be done in this distinctly advanced amateur filming method." Movie Makers, Dec. 1932, 562.


Total Pages: 203