Hazel Powell

All I can figure is that Stan Laurel is picked up at the train depot and brought back by the husband to the family home where the wife is having a suffragette meeting. None too pleased they cause mayhem and then the neighbours are brought into it as Stan cleans up the backyard by throwing all the rubbish into their award winning garden.

5.1/10

A nervy young man follows a pretty lady into a diner to flirt with her, but winds up getting stuck with the tab.

5.7/10

In this early short Harold Lloyd sneaks into a movie studio in order to locate an attractive young lady he's just met at a snack bar. He's retrieved a letter she dropped and wants to return it to her, but it's pretty clear that his interest extends beyond mere politeness. (She's the adorable young Bebe Daniels, so this is easy to understand.) The movie studio setting provides Harold with lots of opportunities to do what comedians do in comedies like this one: flirt with actresses, anger the studio brass, and dash through sets disrupting everything.

6/10

A photo studio operator seems only interested in flirting with women. Hilarity ensues.

6.6/10

Our hero saves a man from drowning, only to find that it is the wrong man.

6/10

A counterfeit count is aided in his courtship of the heroine by her father who is overwhelmed by his "title."

5.2/10