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  1. An Old-Time Nightmare

    An Old-Time Nightmare

    1911 · 7m

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  1. An Old-Time Nightmare. An Old-Time Nightmare is a lost 1911 American silent comedy-fantasy film. Directed by Fred Walton, the short was released as the latter half of a 1000-foot "split reel", with the first half being another comedy short, Lost in a Hotel. [5] [1] Both films were produced by the Powers Moving Picture Company of New York.

  2. An Old-Time Nightmare is a lost 1911 American silent comedy-fantasy film. Directed by Fred Walton, the short was released as the latter half of a 1000-foot "split reel", with the first half being another comedy short, Lost in a Hotel.

  3. An Old Time Nightmare: A group of boys are fishing by a pond. One of them was more thoughtful than the others in providing himself with a large wedge of pie. In the laws of Boyland possession is 99 points of the law.

    • Short, Comedy
    • 1911-09-19
  4. An Old Time Nightmare (1911) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  5. Lost in a Hotel is a 1911 American silent comedy film. It was released as the first half of a 1000-foot "split reel", with the latter half being the comedy-fantasy short An Old-Time Nightmare. [4] [5] Both films, currently presumed to be "lost", were produced by the Powers Moving Picture Company of New York.

  6. An Old-Time Nightmare is a lost 1911 American silent comedy-fantasy film. Directed by Fred Walton, the short was released as the latter half of a 1000-foot "split reel", with the first half being another comedy short, Lost in a Hotel. Both films were produced by the Powers Moving Picture Company of New York. This short's performers are not credited in 1911 reviews, in plot summaries, or in ...

  7. Juvenile productions have been done before, but we find it incumbent upon us to applaud the novelty of the film in question. It is a story of Birdland. A picture with a distinct lesson and moral for boys who rob birds' nests. Most of the characters represent birds, much on the order of Rostand's "Chantecler."

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