Lady Baffles and Detective Duck[pt] (1915), "a spoof of cliff-hanger serials in eleven one-reel chapters,"[7] directed by Allen Curtis. (Joe Martin appears in extant episodes four, "Baffles Aids Cupid,"[citation needed] and nine, "When the Wets Went Dry.")[8]
His Day of Rest (1920), one reel,[48] adventure comedy[49]
A Monkey Bell Hop (1921), Universal Jewel, two-reel comedy, directed by Harry Burns[6]
A Monkey Hero (1921), two-reel comedy, directed by Harry Burns,[6] working title A Monkey Fireman[50]
A Monkey Movie Star (1921), two-reel comedy, directed by Harry Burns[6] — Shot at the Universal City arena, said to be Joe Martin's "autobiography" and "show the simian star as he actually is, both before the camera and in the seclusion of his jungle bungalow."[51][52] — "The picture shows the mode of life and the training of the famous orang-outang."[53]
No Monkey Business (1921), one[54] or two reels, directed by Al Russell[6]
His Lady Friend (1921), two reels, directed by Vin Moore[6][55]
Seven Years Bad Luck (1921), feature comedy with an extended sequence filmed at the Universal City Zoo; said to be Max Linder's best surviving film[56]
↑ Information on this film is unusually thin; however it was mentioned in the Literary Digest article and Exhibitor's World: "Al Santell, director of comedies at Universal, has just completed Upper Three and Lower Four, an elaborate production. Santell was seven weeks filming the picture and expects to spend two more weeks in the cutting."[40][41]
↑ Lauritzen, Einar; Lundquist, Gunnar; Spehr, Paul; Dalton, Susan; Long, Derek. "What Darwin Missed". Early Cinema Titles, 1908-21. Media and Cinema Studies Department, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved November 23, 2022– via ECHO (Early Cinema History Online).
↑ Lauritzen, Einar; Lundquist, Gunnar; Spehr, Paul; Dalton, Susan; Long, Derek. "Hungry's Happy Dream". Early Cinema Titles, 1908-21. Media and Cinema Studies Department, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved November 23, 2022– via ECHO (Early Cinema History Online).
↑ Lauritzen, Einar; Lundquist, Gunnar; Spehr, Paul; Dalton, Susan; Long, Derek. "Making Monkey Business". Early Cinema Titles, 1908-21. Media and Cinema Studies Department, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved November 23, 2022– via ECHO (Early Cinema History Online).
1 2 3 Reeder, Thomas (2021). Time is money!: the Century, Rainbow, and Stern Brothers comedies of Julius and Abe Stern. Orlando, Florida: BearManor Media. pp.133–145 (Joe Martin, Mrs. Joe Martin, William Campbell, Harry Burns, Diana Cary memoir), 839–842 (Filmography appendix: Joe Martin comedies). ISBN9781629337982. OCLC1273678339.
↑ Lauritzen, Einar; Lundquist, Gunnar; Spehr, Paul; Dalton, Susan; Long, Derek. "Monkey Stuff". Early Cinema Titles, 1908-21. Media and Cinema Studies Department, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved November 23, 2022– via ECHO (Early Cinema History Online).
↑ Lauritzen, Einar; Lundquist, Gunnar; Spehr, Paul; Dalton, Susan; Long, Derek. "A Prohibition Monkey". Early Cinema Titles, 1908-21. Media and Cinema Studies Department, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved November 23, 2022– via ECHO (Early Cinema History Online).
↑ Lauritzen, Einar; Lundquist, Gunnar; Spehr, Paul; Dalton, Susan; Long, Derek. "A Wild Night". Early Cinema Titles, 1908-21. Media and Cinema Studies Department, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved November 23, 2022– via ECHO (Early Cinema History Online).
This page is based on this Wikipedia article Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.