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- The popular American radio program from the 1930s and 1940s lives on in the surviving recordings collected on the Internet Archive.
- You are a young boy in search of your missing Pokéballs. Go around and collect Pokéballs. If you see anything weird, just ignore them and run. But beware of the Zekrom that guards the area.
- A compilation of 30 experimental animations and interactive quizzes and the like.
- The enemy won't move if you are looking at them. There is a chance of them teleporting away from you if they are stalking behind you. This chance will get slimmer with each Pokéball you collect.
- Music video by Niño de Elche performing El Pregón de los Caramelos.
- Experimental music video, which meditates on corporate influence in the media.
- Music video for "Cirrus" by Bonobo.
- A look at many of the shows and appearances by Bob Hope at US military bases and installations all over the world since World War II. Included are musical numbers and skits featuring such stars as Betty Grable, Betty Hutton, Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby, Judy Garland and Lana Turner.
- Classroom training film that promotes the benefits of "healthy" eating for children.
- A stuntman plans to launch a small plane o0ff the roof of a speeding car. The local newspaper sends a photographer to cover thee event, but also sends a truck with a new technological device that will enable the photographer to send his photos to the newspaper almost immediately: device that can transmit photos over telephone wire. The mechanics of that process are then explained to the viewer.
- Collage of sequences drawn from a wide variety of ephemeral (industrial, advertising, educational and amateur) films, touring the conflicted landscapes of twentieth-century America. The films' often-skewed visions construct an American history filled with horror and hope, unreeling in familiar and unexpected ways. Panorama Ephemera focuses on familiar and mythical activities and images in America (1626-1978). Many creatures and substances that we hardly notice because we feel so used to them take center stage, including pigs, corn, water, telephones, fire, and rice. At first resembling a compilation, it soon reveals itself as a journey through the American landscape over time, and the story begins to emerge between the sequences. The film consists of 64 self-contained film sequences ranging from 5 seconds to 4 minutes in length arranged into a narrative. Unlike many films made using archival footage, it's primarily a combination of sequences rather than a collage of individual shots. The film is populated by American children, animals, farmers, industrial workers, superheroes, pioneers heading West, crash test dummies, and many others.
- An animated short film where the artwork was created by the public.
- This early (1951) short, which lasts less than two minutes, features Sheree North--long before she became famous--dancing in a one-piece swimsuit and a pair of cat's ears. She then leaps out of camera range and reappears wearing a two-piece swimsuit, this time with no cat's ears. She dances some more. That's it.
- A rebuttal to the short film (Operation Abolition) produced by the House Committee on Un-American Activities documenting demonstration and rioting during the San Francisco hearings.
- An attractive young woman is getting ready to get undressed in her bedroom, but soon begins to suspect that someone is watching her.
- During two devastating Luftwaffe air raids in 1941, the town of Clydebank in Scotland was largely destroyed. 528 people died, 617 people were seriously injured, and hundreds more were injured by blast debris.
- A story of a human trafficking survivor two months before his death. Ivan, a well-educated man, formerly a man in a good shape, speaks of his dreadful experience of being exploited for three and a half years as a domestic slave.
- With more than a billion people spread across 54 countries speaking more than 3,000 languages, Africa cannot -- and should not -- be limited to a single narrative. Africa Straight Up is a more complete story about Africa and its diaspora.
- Childhood is a carefree, "fun" time for children - at least in theory. Both parents and children are under pressure because of changing times and shifting values. Childhood is the best time to teach people anything. It is when we are ready to learn. That's why these films were created to train a generation of American youth.
- Raw newsreel footage is compiled to tell the story of the tragic German zeppelin, featuring scenes of the airship's happier days in 1936, followed by shots chronicling the Hindenburg's final hours on May 6, 1937, before its fiery demise.
- Public morality, late night cavorting, and a practical joke. A constable and a subway attendant are working late at night in an underground station. A well-dressed man and two well-dressed women of the night enter the platform, and they are soon in trouble for violating public decorum. Another man arrives, carrying a long package. A train arrives to our right and the man with the package boards. Soon, to the consternation of the constable, women's legs (in hose) are on full display. The constable will have none of it. Will there be an arrest?
- Two prospectors set out for the Klondike gold fields via a shorter, but hellish route nicknamed "Dead Horse Trail" and one lives to tell the tale. An official selection of the Atlanta Film Festival (1974) and awarded Honorable Mention at the 2016 Electric City Film Festival where it was also an official selection.
- This short shows how important a good night's sleep and regular sleeping habits are to everyday living and your overall health, by giving your body a chance to rest and recharge itself.
- Promotional short that purports to show the health benefits of "Nutrilife" vitamin supplements made by the firm of Mylinger & Casselberry, which produced this film.
- How a new concept of health care--the neighborhood health center--affects poorer neighborhoods in which many residents cannot afford to see a doctor or who may have never actually been to see one before.
- Three problem-plagued teens are shown how to solve their physical and emotional problems by joining the Acrobatics Club and learning teamwork and "the right kind of exercise."
- Instructional film on how to use a dial telephone.
- The author discusses his life and career, including his most famous creation, Sherlock Holmes; and his interest in spiritualism.
- This short, produced by Western Electric, shows various stages of the construction of the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City. Highlighted are workers doing the actual construction of the buildings, as well as other workers setting up the telephone and electrical systems, laying the foundations for the buildings, etc. Also shown are panoramic views of the New York City harbor, including the Statue of Liberty and several large ocean liners either docked or being berthed.
- Slow-motion, reverse-motion, and trick photography adds extra amusement to scenes of galloping horses, leaping dogs, and various rodeo acts.
- A man with a gun is seeking for a book in the cellar, filled with horrendous things.
- A housewife is shown how using Quick Elastic starch can make her ironing chores easier and her clothes come out cleaner.
- Two children sneak out of their bedroom on the night of December 24, so that they can ask 'Santa Claus' where he lives and what he does the rest of the year.
- An animated figure pops up to entertain a man, and makes fun with a telephone and a phone commercial in quite a clever stop-animation animated short.
- Produced by General Motors Corp., this short showcases GM's rehabilitation program for injured and disabled war veterans.