The Wireless Wire-Walkers Explained

The Wireless Wire-Walkers
Director:Vernon Stallings
Producer:J.R. Bray
Studio:Bray Productions
Distributor:Goldwyn Pictures
Color Process:Black and white
Runtime:3:36
Language:English

The Wireless Wire-Walkers, also released as Wireless Wire Walker, is a 1921 silent animated film starring Krazy Kat.[1] The film marks the final Krazy Kat film produced by Bray Studios before the filmmakers moved to Winkler Pictures.

Plot

Krazy opens a pair of umbrellas for some reason. Momentarily, his buddy, a weasel, shows up holding some balloons. Krazy takes the balloons and places them under the umbrellas.

Krazy and the weasel later put up an acrobatic show where hundreds of spectators come to watch. Their act involves a wire attached to two poles. The weasel is first to go on the wire, and performs well. Krazy also goes on the wire, and performs good too.

Krazy and the weasel attempt to do a wireless act as Krazy takes out the wire. The two performers then brought their umbrellas with balloons underneath. The weasel is again first to perform and manages to walk around as if there's a wire on the poles. Before Krazy could perform, the balloons under both umbrellas burst. This infuriates the audience who start chasing them. The chase continues until everyone runs off an edge and falls into a canyon.

See also

References

  1. Book: Lenburg . Jeff . The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons . 1999 . Checkmark Books . 0-8160-3831-7 . June 6, 2020 . 34–35.

External links