1923 silent film by Robert F. McGowan
Dogs of War! is a 1923 silent short subject, the fourteenth entry in Hal Roach's Our Gang (Little Rascals) series. Directed by Robert F. McGowan, the two-reel short was released to theaters in July 1923 by Pathé Exchange.[2] The short was filmed alongside Why Worry?, a feature comedy produced by Roach and starring Harold Lloyd, who makes a cameo appearance in Dogs of War as himself.
Plot
Near West Coast Studios in Hollywood, the gang is waging a street war against a rival group of kids; their ammunition primarily consisting of old vegetables. The battle is halted when Mary is called to act in one of the West Coast films. The rest of the gang tries to crash the studio gates and get a role in the picture, but the casting director throws them out. Farina manages to sneak into the studio, however, prompting the other kids to sneak in after her. Several chases throughout the property then ensue and the gang eventually escapes - with a little help from Harold Lloyd.
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Sunshine Sammy at war
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Mickey Daniels is a "genrel"
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Mary Kornman is the troops' nurse
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Joe Cobb wants to earn "fi'" dollars
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Jackie Condon
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Farina in Dogs of War!
Cast
The Gang
Additional cast
- Andy Samuel as Rival gang member
- George "Freckles" Warde as Rival gang member
- Gabe Saienz as Rival gang member
- Elmo Billings as Rival gang member
- Harold Lloyd as himself
- Jobyna Ralston as herself
- Roy Brooks as Studio receptionist
- Sammy Brooks as Studio crew member
- Bob Davis as Truck driver
- Dick Gilbert as Studio guard
- William Gillespie as Studio director
- Clara Guiol as Studio actress
- Wallace Howe as Actor around the lot
- Walter Lundin as Harold Lloyd's cameraman
- Joseph Morrison as Studio assistant director
- Fred Newmeyer as Harold Lloyd's cameraman
- Charles Stevenson as Studio actor
- Leo White as Actor around the lot
- Charley Young as Studio cameraman
Notes
- When the television rights for the original silent Pathé Our Gang comedies were sold to National Telepix and other distributors, several episodes were retitled. Footage from the first half of this film was released into television syndication in 1960 under the title Battleground.
- Footage from the second half of this film was released to the series in the hybrid episode "Hollywood U.S.A.".
- Later, MGM Our Gang used a similar rotten vegetable war theme in the 1941 short Fightin Fools.
Filming Locations
The final scene when the Gang is running down the street was filmed opposite 8868 Carson Street. They are running down Carson Street towards Higuera Street in Culver City, California.[3]
See also
References
External links