Farmer Al Falfa Sees New York

Farmer Al Falfa Sees New York, also called Farmer Al Falfa in New York, is a 1916 silent short animated film produced by Bray Productions, featuring Farmer Al Falfa.[1] The film is part of the early series to feature the character. The series itself began after a successful pilot film released a year ago.

Farmer Al Falfa Sees New York
Directed byPaul Terry
Produced byJ.R. Bray
Color processBlack and white
Distributed byJ. R. Bray
Famous Players
Lasky Corporation
Release date
October 9, 1916
Running time
6:04
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Farmer Al Falfa arrives in New York City by taxi. Yards away, a man with binoculars on a rooftop looks for visitors to rob until setting sights on Al. The man phone calls a femme fatale woman and tells her to meet him. The woman finds and invites Al to come with her to a night club.

At the night club, Al and the woman drink some wine. After consuming two glasses, he becomes intoxicated and collapses. While Al is flat on the floor, the woman heads to his bag, and takes some valuables before running off. Coming out of the bag is Al's dog which barks to wake up its master.

Just after exiting the night club, Al, who still has hangover, decides to lay his back on a lightpost. Momentarily, a hefty man comes and greets him. Figuring he has lots of cash, the hefty man invites and takes Al to the latter's buddies.

Al meets the hefty man's three friends at a poker room who then entice him to a high-stakes poker game. Over the course of the play, Al's stacks of chips become smaller and smaller. One of the poker players then employ an illegal strategy of secretly trying to pass cards to another player. Al, who is suspicious of the game, opens his bag and releases his dog which snatches and brings the cards to him. Al then comes up with a winning combination that garners him all the chips on the table, much to the other players' surprise. The dog then puts out the light, and a brawl erupts. Fortunately for him, Al is able to escape with his winnings.

Riding on a train in style, Al leaves New York City a wealthy man.

gollark: I would suspect it being a distro thing, but I have multiMC installed from the AUR and recompiling it didn't help.
gollark: ```osmarks@fenrir ~/Downloads [SIGSEGV]> calibre-debug -gcalibre 4.13 embedded-python: False is64bit: TrueLinux-5.5.13-arch2-1-x86_64-with-glibc2.2.5 Linux ('64bit', 'ELF')('Linux', '5.5.13-arch2-1', '#1 SMP PREEMPT Mon, 30 Mar 2020 20:42:41 +0000')Python 2.7.17Linux: ('', '', '')Interface language: NoneSuccessfully initialized third party plugins: Gather KFX-ZIP (from KFX Input) (1, 29, 0) && DeDRM (6, 6, 3) && Package KFX (from KFX Input) (1, 29, 0) && KFX metadata reader (from KFX Input) (1, 29, 0) && KFX Input (1, 29, 0)Turning on automatic hidpi scalingdevicePixelRatio: 1.0logicalDpi: 96.1119113573 x 96.0945812808physicalDpi: 112.286084142 x 112.758381503Using calibre Qt style: Truefish: “calibre-debug -g” terminated by signal SIGSEGV (Address boundary error)```with calibre.
gollark: I checked, I have more but they all break.
gollark: I only have something like three installed as far as I know, and they're all broken.
gollark: I'd kind of expect other people to have noticed and reported this if it is actually a general problem with these versions, since I'm using calibre and qt from the repos.

References

  1. Lenburg, Jeff (2009). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons (3rd ed.). New York: Checkmark Books. pp. 24–25. ISBN 978-0-8160-6600-1.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.