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- My Old Kentucky home is the first sound cartoon ever produced and finds a dog getting ready for dinner as the story takes us into a sing-a-long with "My Old Kentucky Home".
- Carrie works her charm on a small-town judge after she and her fellow chorus girls are arrested for performing an indecent hula dance.
- A poor vegetable peddler in Paris runs afoul of the law and finds himself ground up in the cogs of the corrupt French judicial system.
- Ko-Ko the clown and his glee club lead the audience in an early follow-the-bouncing-ball sing-along.
- An illustration of the basic principles of Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity.
- This 1924 cartoon features an animated KoKo the Clown and a live-action Max Fleischer. Max has invented a new, electric, drawing device. He uses this to finish the drawing and then, with a somewhat maniacal grin on his face, he turns the device on poor, hapless KoKo.
- A sing-along cartoon to the song "Jingle Bells".
- Ko-Ko and Fitz are jealous of Max's new puppy and play a trick on him. As punishment, Max puts the two in prison.
- Ko-Ko and Fitz assume control of an insane asylum.
- Photography is manipulated in slow-motion, reverse-motion, and freeze-frame to analyze the movement of horses, chickens, typing fingers, an Olympic long-jumper, and a lump of sugar dropped into milk.
- A scene at a train station leads to a sing-along of the title song, followed by an amusing cartoon sing-along of humorous new lyrics about spotting a "married man".
- Chased by Father Time, Ko-Ko runs through time and into the futuristic world of 1999. There, Ko-Ko finds a mechanical barber, an automated feeding machine, and even an instant marriage.
- In this Christmas season release, Max assembles a toy train track while Ko-Ko the Clown visits a cartoon toyland, playing cops and robbers and rescuing a doll in distress.
- Ko-Ko competes against a rival clown in a race.
- Max is moving out of his studio, so Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown packs up everything in sight (even using a super-charged vacuum cleaner that sucks up the furniture and the moving men).
- Max is inspired by a cute puppy, and gives Ko-Ko a trained dog to show off in a circus ring. The dog performs a variety of tricks, but things get out of hand once Ko-Ko's trained fleas are let loose into the crowd.
- Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown is joined by clown allies from around the world to fend off a supposed Martian invasion.
- At the studio Thanksgiving dinner, Ko-Ko plays a home movie reel showing clips of his wildest pranks on "The Boss" from previous "Out of the Inkwell" films.
- Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown spends a vacation at a rubbery amusement park.
- Series of animated vignettes linked by a disembodied hand which appears to be drawing the illustrations. In the first segment, the hand turns around a drawing of an old man and canine-hero Rin-Tin-Tin magically appears. In the second set of segments, drawings of children morph into adults who look completely unlike their youthful countenances. in the final segment, the hand slices up "The House That Jack Built" into the pictures of the most significant characters in the children's rhyme, and then reattaches the slips of paper to reform the house.
- Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown sculpts a bust of Max out of a lump of clay, and later enters a clay village.
- Ko-Ko the Clown is brought to life with a needle and thread. Max accidentally tears Ko-Ko's paper and stitches him back together. After a fencing duel with his creator, Ko-Ko leaps off the paper and strings thread all over Max's studio.
- Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown meets familiar nursery rhyme characters.
- Ko-Ko and Fitz celebrate the Fouth of July with fireworks and end up rocketed to an island inhabited by cannibals.
- While Max shaves at the sink, Ko-Ko runs his own wacky barbershop. Things get out of hand when Ko-Ko takes his scissors on a cutting spree all over town, and then causes mischief for Max with a bottle of hair tonic.
- On Friday the 13th, Ko-Ko and his dog are chased by ghosts inside a haunted house.
- Ko-Ko and Fitz find that everything in their cartoon world is moving backwards. After entering the real world, they go inside a clock and move the hands backward, causing life all around the city to run in reverse.
- The Inkwell Clown runs away from Max and winds up falling through a crack in the floorboards and into a fiery Hell.
- Carrie and her vaudeville troupe are stranded in a small town. Carrie "wins" the confidence of the town banker who pays their railroad fare to the next town, and goes with them. A society of "do-gooders" and "uplifters" try to break up the troupe, holding a convention in that town, and have them arrested, but Carrie and her show-girls break up the convention, and flirt with the police officers. The banker does not fare as well as his wife is one of the convention attendees.
- Ko-Ko hosts a vaudeville revue featuring rope tricks, an equestrian act, trained seals, and stage magic.
- Slow-motion, reverse-motion, and freeze-frame footage is used to analyze baseball action, from various pitches to close plays to Babe Ruth's mighty swing, and to offer an unconventional look at soldiers marching in a military parade.
- Neighborhood cats come to the tiny Ko-Ko Theatre to watch Ko-Ko and Fitz stage a variety of entertaining acts, from acrobatics to high-diving to statuelike tableaux vivants.
- The patented Fleischer-Novagraph process provides unique images in slow motion, reverse motion, and freeze-frame. Subjects include a variety well-known athletes in action.