The following is a complete list of the 220 Our Gang short films produced by Hal Roach Studios and/or Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer between 1922 and 1944, in order of release.
1922 - 1923 - 1924 - 1925 - 1926 - 1927 - 1928 - 1929 - 1930 - 1931
1932 - 1933 - 1934 - 1935 - 1936 - 1937 - 1938 - 1939 - 1940 - 1941 - 1942 - 1943 - 1944
The Roach/Pathé silents (1922–1928)
These two-reel silent Our Gang shorts were produced by Hal Roach Studios and distributed to theaters by Pathé.
1922
- 001 One Terrible Day (September 10)
- 002 Fire Fighters (October 8)
- 003 Our Gang (November 5)
- 004 Young Sherlocks (November 26)
- 005 Saturday Morning (December 3)
- 006 A Quiet Street (December 31)
1923
- 007 The Champeen (January 28)
- 008 The Cobbler (February 18)
- 009 The Big Show (February 25)
- 010 A Pleasant Journey (March 18)
- 011 Boys to Board (April 8)
- 012 Giants vs. Yanks (May 13)
- 013 Back Stage (June 3)
- 014 Dogs of War (July 1)
- 015 Lodge Night (July 29)
- 016 July Days (August 26)
- 017 No Noise (September 23)
- 018 Stage Fright (October 21)
- 019 Derby Day (November 18)
- 020 Sunday Calm (December 16)
1924
- 021 Tire Trouble (January 13)
- 022 Big Business (February 10)
- 023 The Buccaneers (March 9)
- 024 Seein' Things (April 6)
- 025 Commencement Day (May 4)
- 026 Cradle Robbers (June 1)
- 027 Jubilo, Jr. (June 29)
- 028 It's a Bear (July 24)
- 029 High Society (August 24)
- 030 The Sun Down Limited (September 21)
- 031 Every Man For Himself (October 19)
- 032 Fast Company (November 16)
- 033 The Mysterious Mystery! (December 14)
1925
- 034 The Big Town (January 11)
- 035 Circus Fever (February 8)
- 036 Dog Days (March 8)
- 037 The Love Bug (April 5)
- 038 Shootin' Injuns (May 3)
- 039 Ask Grandma (May 31)
- 040 Official Officers (June 28)
- 041 Boys Will Be Joys (July 26)
- 042 Mary, Queen of Tots (August 23)
- 043 Your Own Back Yard (September 27)
- 044 Better Movies (November 1)
- 045 One Wild Ride (December 6)
1926
- 046 Good Cheer (January 26)
- 047 Buried Treasure (February 14)
- 048 Monkey Business (March 21)
- 049 Baby Clothes (April 25)
- 050 Uncle Tom's Uncle (May 30)
- 051 Thundering Fleas (July 18)
- 052 Shivering Spooks (August 8)
- 053The Fourth Alarm (September 12)
- 054 War Feathers (November 21)
- 055 Telling Whoppers (December 19)
1927
- 056 Bring Home the Turkey (January 16)
- 057 Seeing the World (February 13)
- 058 Ten Years Old (March 13)
- 059 Love My Dog (April 17)
- 060 Tired Business Men (May 15)
- 061 Baby Brother (June 26)
- 062 The Glorious Fourth (June 26)
- 063 Olympic Games (September 11)
- 066 Chicken Feed (November 6)
1928
- 069 Playin' Hookey (January 1)
- 072 The Smile Wins (February 26)
The Roach/MGM silents (1927–1929)
These silent Our Gang shorts were produced by Hal Roach Studios and distributed to theaters by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. All films are two reels (20 minutes) long, except Spook Spoofing, which is three reels (30 minutes) long. Shorts marked with an asterisk (*) were originally released with a synchronized music and sound effects track.
1927
- 064 Yale vs. Harvard (September 24)
- 065 The Old Wallop (October 22)
- 067 Heebee Jeebees (November 19)
- 068 Dog Heaven (December 17)
1928
- 070 Spook Spoofing (January 14)
- 071 Rainy Days (February 11)
- 073 Edison, Marconi & Co. (March 10)
- 074 Barnum & Ringling, Inc. (April 7) *
- 075 Fair and Muddy (May 5)
- 076 Crazy House (June 2)
- 077 Growing Pains (September 22)
- 078 Old Gray Hoss (October 20)
- 079 School Begins' (November 17)
- 080 The Spanking Age (December 15) *
1929
- 081 Election Day (January 12)
- 082 Noisy Noises (February 9) *
- 083 The Holy Terror (March 9)
- 084 Wiggle Your Ears (April 6) *
- 085 Fast Freight (May 9)
- 087 Little Mother (June 1)
- 091 Cat, Dog & Co. (September 14) *
- 093 Saturday's Lesson (November 9) *
The Roach/MGM talkies (1929–1938,The Little Rascals)
These sound Our Gang shorts were produced by Hal Roach Studios and distributed to theaters by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. These 80 films, excepting some that have been removed for content, are the Our Gang shorts that King World Productions have packaged and syndicated as The Little Rascals.
All shorts through Arbor Day in 1936 are two reels (approximately 17 to 20 minutes) long except Small Talk, which is three reels (26 minutes) long. Subsequent shorts (1936's Bored of Education through 1938's Hide and Shriek) are one reel (10 minutes) in length. Also in 1936, an Our Gang feature-length film, General Spanky, was released by MGM . Many of the shorts were edited for television over the years, and distributor King World Productions removed several of the shorts from their Little Rascals television package. Shorts that were either edited for, or withheld from, television broadcast are noted as such.
1929 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 086 | Small Talk | Robert McGowan | May 18 |
|
| 088 | Railroadin' | Robert McGowan | June 15 |
|
| 089 | Lazy Days | Robert McGowan | August 15 |
|
| 090 | Boxing Gloves | Anthony Mack | September 9 |
|
| 092 | Bouncing Babies | Robert McGowan | October 12 |
|
| 094 | Moan and Groan, Inc. | Robert McGowan | December 7 |
|
1930 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
| 095 | Shivering Shakespeare | Anthony Mack | January 25 |
|
| 096 | The First Seven Years | Robert McGowan | March 1 |
|
| 097 | When the Wind Blows | James W. Horne | April 5 |
|
| 098 | Bear Shooters | Robert McGowan | May 17 |
|
| 099 | A Tough Winter | Robert McGowan | June 21 |
|
| 100 | Pups Is Pups | Robert McGowan | August 30 |
|
| 101 | Teacher's Pet | Robert McGowan | October 11 |
|
| 102 | School's Out | Robert McGowan | November 22 |
|
1931 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
| 103 | Helping Grandma | Robert McGowan | January 3 |
|
| 104 | Love Business | Robert McGowan | February 14 |
|
| 105 | Little Daddy | Robert McGowan | March 28 |
|
| 106 | Bargain Day | Robert McGowan | May 2 |
|
| 107 | Fly My Kite | Robert McGowan | May 30 |
|
| 108 | Big Ears | Robert McGowan | August 29 |
|
| 109 | Shiver My Timbers | Robert McGowan | October 10 |
|
| 110 | Dogs Is Dogs | Robert McGowan | November 21 |
|
1932 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
| 111 | Readin' and Writin' | Robert McGowan | January 2 |
|
| 112 | Free Eats | Raymond McCarey | February 13 |
|
| 113 | Spanky | Robert McGowan | March 26 |
|
| 114 | Choo-Choo! | Robert McGowan | May 7 |
|
| 115 | The Pooch | Robert McGowan | June 11 |
|
| 116 | Hook and Ladder | Robert McGowan | August 27 |
|
| 117 | Free Wheeling | Robert McGowan | October 1 |
|
| 118 | Birthday Blues | Robert McGowan | November 12 |
|
| 119 | A Lad an' a Lamp | Robert McGowan | December 17 |
|
1933 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
| 120 | Fish Hooky | Robert McGowan | January 28 |
|
| 121 | Forgotten Babies | Robert McGowan | March 11 | |
| 122 | The Kid From Borneo | Robert McGowan | April 15 |
|
| 123 | Mush and Milk | Robert McGowan | May 27 |
|
| 124 | Bedtime Worries | Robert McGowan | September 9 |
|
| 125 | Wild Poses | Robert McGowan | October 28 |
|
1934 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
| 126 | Hi'-Neighbor! | Gus Meins | March 3 |
|
| 127 | For Pete's Sake! | Gus Meins | April 14 |
|
| 128 | The First Round-Up | Gus Meins | May 5 |
|
| 129 | Honky Donkey | Gus Meins | June 2 |
|
| 130 | Mike Fright | Gus Meins | August 25 |
|
| 131 | Washee Ironee | James Parrott | November 13 [1] |
|
1935 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
| 132 | Mama's Little Pirate | Gus Meins | January 5 [1] |
|
| 133 | Shrimps for a Day | Gus Meins | February 20 [1] |
|
| 134 | Anniversary Trouble | Gus Meins | March 13 [1] |
|
| 135 | Beginner's Luck | Gus Meins | April 8 [1] |
|
| 136 | Teacher's Beau | Gus Meins | April 27 |
|
| 137 | Sprucin' Up | Gus Meins | June 1 |
|
| 138 | Little Papa | Gus Meins | September 21 |
|
| 139 | Little Sinner | Gus Meins | October 26 |
|
| 140 | Our Gang Follies of 1936 | Gus Meins | November 30 |
|
1936 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
| 141 | The Pinch Singer | Fred Newmeyer | January 4 |
|
| 142 | Divot Diggers | Robert McGowan | February 8 |
|
| 143 | The Lucky Corner | Gus Meins | March 14 |
|
| 144 | Second Childhood | Gus Meins | April 11 | |
| 145 | Arbor Day | Fred Newmeyer | May 2 |
|
| 146 | Bored of Education | Gordon Douglas | August 20 |
|
| 147 | Two Too Young | Gordon Douglas | September 26 |
|
| 148 | Pay As You Exit | Gordon Douglas | October 24 |
|
| 149 | Spooky Hooky | Gordon Douglas | December 5 |
|
1937 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
| 150 | Reunion in Rhythm | Gordon Douglas | January 9 |
|
| 151 | Glove Taps | Gordon Douglas | February 20 |
|
| 152 | Hearts Are Thumps | Gordon Douglas | April 3 |
|
| 153 | Three Smart Boys | Gordon Douglas | May 13 |
|
| 154 | Rushin' Ballet | Gordon Douglas | April 24 |
|
| 155 | Roamin' Holiday | Gordon Douglas | June 12 | |
| 156 | Night 'n' Gales | Gordon Douglas | July 24 |
|
| 157 | Fishy Tales | Gordon Douglas | August 28 | |
| 158 | Framing Youth | Gordon Douglas | September 11 |
|
| 159 | The Pigskin Palooka | Gordon Douglas | October 23 | |
| 160 | Mail and Female | Fred Newmeyer | November 13 | |
| 161 | Our Gang Follies of 1938 | Gordon Douglas | December 18 |
|
1938 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes/Content edits for television |
| 162 | Canned Fishing | Gordon Douglas | February 12 | |
| 163 | Bear Facts | Gordon Douglas | March 5 | |
| 164 | Three Men in a Tub | Nate Watt | March 26 | |
| 165 | Came the Brawn | Gordon Douglas | April 16 |
|
| 166 | Feed 'em and Weep | Gordon Douglas | May 7 |
|
| 167 | The Awful Tooth | Nate Watt | May 28 | |
| 168 | Hide and Shriek | Gordon Douglas | June 18 |
|
The MGM talkies (1938–1944)
These one-reel sound Our Gang shorts were produced and distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
1938 |
||||
| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 169 | The Little Ranger | Gordon Douglas | May 18 | |
| 170 | Party Fever | George Sidney | June 15 | |
| 171 | Aladdin's Lantern | Gordon Douglas | September 17 |
|
| 172 | Men In Fright | George Sidney | October 15 | |
| 173 | Football Romeo | George Sidney | November 12 | |
| 174 | Practical Jokers | George Sidney | December 17 | |
1939 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes |
| 175 | Alfalfa's Aunt | George Sidney | January 7 | |
| 176 | Tiny Troubles | George Sidney | February 18 | |
| 177 | Duel Personalities | George Sidney | March 11 | |
| 178 | Clown Princes | George Sidney | April 15 | |
| 179 | Cousin Wilbur | George Sidney | April 29 |
|
| 180 | Joy Scouts | Edward Cahn | June 24 |
|
| 181 | Dog Daze | George Sidney | July 1 |
|
| 182 | Auto Antics | Edward Cahn | July 22 |
|
| 183 | Captain Spanky's Show Boat | Edward Cahn | September 9 |
|
| 184 | Dad for a Day | Edward Cahn | October 21 | |
| 185 | Time Out for Lessons | Edward Cahn Bud Murray |
December 2 |
|
1940 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes |
| 186 | Alfalfa's Double | Edward Cahn | January 20 | |
| 187 | The Big Premiere | Edward Cahn | March 9 | |
| 188 | All About Hash | Edward Cahn | March 30 |
|
| 189 | The New Pupil | Edward Cahn | April 27 |
|
| 190 | Bubbling Troubles | Edward Cahn | May 25 |
|
| 191 | Good Bad Boys | Edward Cahn | September 7 |
|
| 192 | Waldo's Last Stand | Edward Cahn Steven Granger |
October 5 |
|
| 193 | Goin' Fishin' | Edward Cahn | October 26 |
|
| 194 | Kiddie Kure | Edward Cahn | November 23 |
|
1941 |
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| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes |
| 195 | Fightin' Fools | Edward Cahn | January 25 | |
| 196 | Baby Blues | Edward Cahn | February 15 | |
| 197 | Ye Olde Minstrels | Edward Cahn Bud Murray |
March 18 |
|
| 198 | 1-2-3 Go | Edward Cahn | April 26 | |
| 199 | Robot Wrecks | Edward Cahn | July 12 | |
| 200 | Helping Hands | Edward Cahn | September 27 |
|
| 201 | Come Back, Miss Pipps | Edward Cahn | October 25 |
|
| 202 | Wedding Worries | Edward Cahn | December 13 |
|
1942 |
||||
| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes |
| 203 | Melodies Old and New | Edward Cahn | January 24 |
|
| 204 | Going to Press | Edward Cahn | March 7 |
|
| 205 | Don't Lie | Edward Cahn | April 4 | |
| 206 | Surprised Parties | Edward Cahn | May 30 | |
| 207 | Doin' Their Bit | Herbert Glazer | July 18 |
|
| 208 | Rover's Big Chance | Herbert Glazer | August 22 |
|
| 209 | Mighty Lak a Goat | Herbert Glazer | October 10 | |
| 210 | Unexpected Riches | Herbert Glazer | November 28 |
|
1943 |
||||
| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes |
| 211 | Benjamin Franklin, Jr. | Herbert Glazer | January 30 | |
| 212 | Family Troubles | Herbert Glazer | April 3 | |
| 213 | Calling All Kids | Sam Baerwitz | April 24 | |
| 214 | Farm Hands | Herbert Glazer | June 19 | |
| 215 | Election Daze | Herbert Glazer | July 31 | |
| 216 | Little Miss Pinkerton | Herbert Glazer | September 18 | |
| 217 | Three Smart Guys | Edward Cahn | October 23 | |
1944 |
||||
| # | Film | Director | Original release date | Notes |
| 218 | Radio Bugs | Cyril Endfield | April 1 | |
| 219 | Tale of a Dog | Cyril Endfield | April 15 |
|
| 220 | Dancing Romeo | Cyril Endfield | April 29 |
|
Cameos/appearances in other films
Our Gang as a unit appeared in a handful of other Hal Roach films, and in a few outside productions as well.
- The Stolen Jools (1931) (a.k.a. The Slippery Pearls) - promotional short subject intended to raise funds for the National Variety Artists tuberculosis sanitarium
- The Cracked Iceman (1934) - a Hal Roach Charley Chase short subject, featuring Chase as a schoolteacher and the Our Gang kids as his students.
- Kid Millions (1934) - an Eddie Cantor musical feature. The Our Gang kids appear among the children in the Technicolor fantasy sequence.
Home videos
Blackhawk/Republic releases
For many years, Blackhawk Films released 79 of the 80 Roach talkies on 16 mm film. The sound discs for Railroading' had been lost since the 1940s, and a silent print was made available for home movie release until 1982, when the film's sound discs were located in the MGM vault and the short was restored with sound. Like the television prints, Blackhawk's Little Rascals reissues featured custom-created title cards in place of the original Our Gang logos, as per MGM's 1949 arrangement with Hal Roach not to distribute the series under its original title.
In 1983, with the VHS home video market growing, Blackhawk began distributing Little Rascals VHS tapes available through catalogue only. 69 of the 80 sound shorts were made available across twenty-three VHS volumes, three shorts to a tape. Half a dozen silent episodes were also available across two VHS volumes.
National Telefilm Associates(later renamed Republic Pictures) purchased Blackhawk in 1983, and continued the catalogue releases while also making The Little Rascals available on retail home video collections in 1984. 30 Little Rascals shorts were released in a set of five VHS compilations, with six shorts to a volume: Little Rascals Comedy Classics 1, Little Rascals Comedy Classics 2, Best of the Little Rascals, Little Rascals on Parade, and Adventures of Little Rascals. Each of these tapes contained two volumes of the 1983 catalogue releases, making each tape contain six episodes. In addition, Republic made the first two catalogue volumes available for retail.
Twelve Little Rascals shorts made their way to home video through Spotlite Video in 1986. These also were all previously released on the catalogue Blackhawk releases and contained none of the ones that had been excluded. These were available through retail. Meanwhile, MGM released 20 of its 52 Our Gang shorts in a five-volume VHS set with four shorts per tape.
In 1991, Republic repackaged 30 Little Rascals shorts for a fifteen-volume VHS set, with two shorts per tape. Out of the 30 episodes released, only one of them had been previously unreleased.
Cabin Fever/Hallmark releases
In 1993, Republic sold the home video rights to the 80 sound Roach shorts and some of the available silent shorts to Cabin Fever Entertainment. Cabin Fever also acquired the rights to use the original Our Gang title cards and MGM logos; for the first time in over 50 years, the Roach sound Our Gang comedies could be seen in their original format. In June 1994, Cabin Fever released a 12-volume set of Little Rascals VHS tapes, hosted by Leonard Maltin. With four shorts per tape, Cabin Fever made 48 Roach sound shorts available for purchase, uncut and with digitally restored and remastered picture and sound.
Due to the success of these volumes, Cabin Fever released nine more volumes in June 1995, which made the other 32 Roach talkies available for purchase (some of which had never been available on home video before). Five of these volumes contained four sound shorts, while the other four featured three sound shorts and a silent short.
Cabin Fever began pressing DVD versions of their first 12 Little Rascals VHS volumes (with the contents of two VHS volumes included on each DVD), but went out of business before the release was announced in late 1998. Early in 1999, they sold their catalog to Hallmark Entertainment.
In April 2000, Hallmark cleared out their warehouse, making all of the Little Rascals DVDs and VHS tapes available for retail, but never did an official launch of the Cabin Fever Little Rascals DVDs. In August, the first 10 volumes were re-released on VHS with new packaging, and the first two volumes were released on DVD as The Little Rascals: Volumes 1-2.
In 2003, the VHS tapes went out of print. That spring, Hallmark issued a DVD called Little Rascals Vols. 3–4, which actually did not completely compile volumes three and four of the Cabin Fever VHS set, but included ten Our Gang shorts. On November 13, 2005, ten more Little Rascals shorts were issued on a DVD entitled Little Rascals Collectors Edition III.
In 2006, Legend Films released colorized versions of fifteen Our Gang comedies (most of which are public domain), which were released across three Little Rascals DVDs. Fourteen of these shorts were Hal Roach talkies, while the remaining film is Waldo's Last Stand, a public-domain short from the MGM era. These DVDs went out of print in the summer of 2008.
RHI Entertainment and Genius Products released a DVD box set entitled The Little Rascals - the Complete Collection on October 28, 2008. This set includes all of the Hal Roach sound short films in the Our Gang series (1929–1938), encompassing all of the Our Gang shorts distributed to TV as The Little Rascals (save for a handful of silents). Sixty-four of the shorts are sourced from the Cabin Fever restorations, while the remaining sixteen shorts utilize older Blackhawk Films transfers without their original title cards. Other than that issue, the actual footage remains unedited.
Until recently, only a handful of MGM Our Gangs were available on DVD. Waldo's Last Stand, which is in the public domain, is one of only five MGM Our Gangs available on DVD. The other four—Party Fever, Dog Daze, Duel Personalities and The Big Premiere—have been released as bonus features in DVD releases of vintage Warner Bros. DVD releases. The former two are on the Warner Home Video release of The Marx Bros. Room Service and At The Circus DVD, while the latter two are on Warner's Mickey Rooney & Judy Garland Collection: Babes In Arms DVD and Broadway Melody Of 1940 DVD, respectively.
On September 1, 2009, Warner Bros. released the 52 MGM Our Gang shorts in a compilation as part of their Warner Archive Collection mail-order series. The collection, Our Gang Comedies 1938–1944, is available for DVD and digital download only by mail order on the Warner Brothers' Studio Online Store. General Spanky remains out of circulation.
Public domain
The following Our Gang comedies are in the public domain, and have appeared on several different VHS and DVD releases over the years (somewhat questionably, some other titles have turned up in unauthorized VHS and DVD editions.)
- 1922: Our Gang; Fire Fighters; Young Sherlocks; One Terrible Day; A Quiet Street; Saturday Morning
- 1923: The Big Show; The Cobbler; The Champeen; Boys To Board; A Pleasant Journey; Giants Vs. Yanks; Back Stage; Dogs of War; Lodge Night; Stage Fright; July Days; Sunday Calm; No Noise; Derby Day
- 1924: Fast Company; Tire Trouble; Big Business; The Buccaneers; Seein' Things; Commencement Day; It's a Bear; Cradle Robbers; Jubilo, Jr.; High Society; The Sun Down Limited; Every Man for Himself; The Mysterious Mystery!
- 1925: The Big Town; Circus Fever; Dog Days; The Love Bug; Ask Grandma; Shootin' Injuns; Official Officers; Mary, Queen of Tots; Boys Will Be Joys; Better Movies; Your Own Back Yard; One Wild Ride
- 1926: Good Cheer; Buried Treasure; Monkey Business; Baby Clothes; Uncle Tom's Uncle; Thundering Fleas; Shivering Spooks; The Fourth Alarm; War Feathers
- 1930: Bear Shooters, School's Out
- 1937: Our Gang Follies of 1938
- 1940: Waldo's Last Stand
In-print Little Rascals DVDs (excluding public domain releases)
- Little Rascals - Collection III: Free Wheeling, Mike Fright, Washee Iornee, Fishy Tales, Divot Diggers, Shiver My Timbers, Board Of Education, Choo Choo, When The Wind Blows, Framing Youth
- Little Rascals Complete Collection: All Hal Roach talkies, with Barnum, Ringling, Inc., Dog Heaven, and Spook Spoofing as bonus shorts.
Notes
- ^ a b c d e Demoss, Robert (2008-11-09). "The Lucky Corner". http://www.theluckycorner.com/. Retrieved 2008-11-19.. This is the copyright date for this film. The dates given for shorts 131 through 135 in the the Leonard Maltin/Richard W. Bann book The Little Rascals: The Life and Times of Our Gang were based on data prepared at the beginning of the film season as projected release dates. Our Gang director Gus Meins stepped in to take over direction of Laurel and Hardy's Babes in Toyland in mid-1934, leaving him unavailible to direct Our Gang. When Babes ran over schedule, James Parrott was called in to direct short #131 Washee Ironee; the others were delayed in shooting until after Babes wrapped in October, pushing the shooting and release dates for much of the 1934 – 35 season back several months from the projected and planned dates. This is based upon information from the Hal Roach Studios archives and the Library of Congress, including filings of documents (cutting continuity, title sheets, film copyright) done during the processes of production.
References
- Maltin, Leonard & Bann, Richard W (1977, rev. 1992). The Little Rascals: The Life & Times of Our Gang. New York: Crown Publishing/Three Rivers Press. ISBN 051-758325-9.
- Demoss, Robert (2008-11-28). "The Lucky Corner". http://www.theluckycorner.com/. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
External links
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