Christopher P. Reilly's Blog, page 200
September 2, 2011
Man charged with streaking and illegal possession of a raccoon.
Published on September 02, 2011 01:09
September 1, 2011
Gary's Mattress: THE MOST RACIST COMMERCIAL EVER and 10 Most Racist Moments in TV
Published on September 01, 2011 10:15
August 26, 2011
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse- RoAD RALLY-FULL EPISODE you must find the triangle shaped bush
This is amazing!`The first item you must find is the "triangle shaped bush" and they do not let you forget it by repeating it 5 times. FF to the 11:30 point because sitting through this is torture. I swear Mickey's Clubhouse is written and animated by a computer program from 1993. Triangle shaped bush.
Published on August 26, 2011 22:13
August 24, 2011
Bizarre Animal Explodes when morons pour soda on it and Sigmund & the Sea Monsters - The Wild Weekend
Published on August 24, 2011 06:16
W.C. Fields in THE FATAL GLASS OF BEER (1933) W.C. Fields Animated beautifully from Beans Cartoon, W.C. Fields attends Chaplin's 'The Circus', premiere footage (1928)
"It ain't a fit night out for man nor beast," bellows W.C. Fields in the Yukon farce The Fatal Glass of Beer (1933), just before a snowball promptly blasts him in the face.
That snowball arrives on cue each of the dozen times Fields opens his front door and delivers the line, and the joke never gets old. Sure, it's a twist on the old pie-in-the-face gag, but that's just the surface. There's no explanation as to who's throwing the snowball, if anyone or why, and like much of the humor in The Fatal Glass of Beer, the real punch-line (if there is one) isn't immediately apparent. If the lack of an obvious "joke" is what makes the film so utterly stupefying to watch, it is also what makes it so richly rewatchable and weirdly haunting. The pacing doesn't anticipate laughter, and the dialogue lacks obvious comic emphasis. It would easy but inaccurate to say that this unusual tone makes the film feel "modern," but it would just as wrong to say this strange two-reeler was "of it's time." The Fatal Glass of Beer is like one of the natural wonders of cinema, a totally bizarre creation that abides by its own rules and exists in its own world—and what a wonderful world to visit it is.
One of the dead pan funniest dead-pan short films of all-time
That snowball arrives on cue each of the dozen times Fields opens his front door and delivers the line, and the joke never gets old. Sure, it's a twist on the old pie-in-the-face gag, but that's just the surface. There's no explanation as to who's throwing the snowball, if anyone or why, and like much of the humor in The Fatal Glass of Beer, the real punch-line (if there is one) isn't immediately apparent. If the lack of an obvious "joke" is what makes the film so utterly stupefying to watch, it is also what makes it so richly rewatchable and weirdly haunting. The pacing doesn't anticipate laughter, and the dialogue lacks obvious comic emphasis. It would easy but inaccurate to say that this unusual tone makes the film feel "modern," but it would just as wrong to say this strange two-reeler was "of it's time." The Fatal Glass of Beer is like one of the natural wonders of cinema, a totally bizarre creation that abides by its own rules and exists in its own world—and what a wonderful world to visit it is.
One of the dead pan funniest dead-pan short films of all-time
Published on August 24, 2011 05:51
August 22, 2011
Rondo Hatton: The BRUTE MAN, complete film (1948)
Hal Moffat who is taking wholesale revenge by murdering those he holds responsible for his predicament, is befriended by Helen Paige, a blind piano teacher, and he develops a warmth for her that leads him to add thievery and robbery - no big deal, he is out there anyway - to his murders so that she can be provided with the money for an operation.
Published on August 22, 2011 10:43
August 16, 2011
Boy on a Dolphin (theme)
For fans of "haunting themes" from cheesy movies, you will love the rhyming of "statue" and "at you" in the bridge.
Published on August 16, 2011 13:28


