The Non-Stop Fright

The Non-Stop Fright is a 1927 animated short film by Pat Sullivan Studios featuring Felix the Cat.[1] The cartoon was originally silent but was reissued with sound years later.

The Non-Stop Fright
Screenshot
Directed byOtto Messmer
Produced byJacques Kopfstein/Pat Sullivan
Animation byOtto Messmer
Color processBlack and white
Production
company
Pat Sullivan Studios
Distributed byBijou Films, Inc.
Release date
August 21, 1927
Running time
7:13
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Inside a house, Felix is lying flat on the floor and appears to be dead. This is what the maid of the house thought as she sweeps Felix into a dust pan and dumps him in the trash bin just out the window. It turns out Felix is actually alive as he climbs out of the bin and walks away in disgust.

While rambling in the open, Felix finds a newspaper on the ground. In the paper, he reads an ad telling whoever could fly to Timbuktu shall be awarded a prize money of $50K. Felix then constructs an aircraft out of ordinary objects and takes off.

Felix is flying in his self-made aircraft. Things were going smoothly until pesky birds and lightning storms force him to fly lower. As he travels close to the sea, a school of fish leap into his plane, therefore slowing him down. Felix manages to get them off, and carry on in his flight.

Finally, Felix sees his destination and makes a landing. To his surprise, however, he finds nobody waiting for him to offer the prize money. Instead, he sees a pack of hungry cannibals ready to make a meal out of him. The cat makes his run as one of the cannibals approaches. In making his escape from the island, Felix inflates a balloon which carries him upward.

gollark: Oh, I have that. Mostly I just throw together random trash at intervals which then becomes a critical part of my infrastructure.
gollark: 2022.
gollark: (warning: horrible suffering)
gollark: Simply learn programming things™.
gollark: Oh, /currency/ just converts currency instead of being its own currency system, a shame.

See also

References

  1. Lenburg, Jeff (2009). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons (3rd ed.). New York: Checkmark Books. pp. 24–26. ISBN 978-0-8160-6600-1.


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