There Auto Be a Law

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There Auto Be a Law
Directed by
Robert Givens
Backgrounds byRichard H. Thomas
Color processTechnicolor
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
June 6, 1953 (US premiere)
Running time
7 min (one reel)
LanguageEnglish

There Auto Be a Law is a 1953

automobiles
.

Plot

A narrator (voiced by an uncredited John T. Smith) discusses automobiles and their advancements throughout the last few decades. A meek, short man with a moustache and glasses is seen in many of the sketches. Gags include:

  • A pan across many motorists stuck on the road (some of which are beating each other up or yelling at one another) because a woman in the first car is too busy putting on lipstick.
  • A man treating his car like a horse, whipping it to make it go faster.
  • A bridge that has half the toll, but that's because it's only half finished.
  • The meek man parking his car in a lot and getting it back in a paper-thin condition.
  • The meek man measuring his car before putting it in a friend's garage, but accidentally hitting the car on a tree branch.
  • The meek man looking both ways before crossing a rural road but still getting hit by a fast-speed car.
  • The meek man allowing a stranded motorist to siphon some of his gas, only to swallow the gasoline and begin sputtering down the road like a car.
  • The meek man being towed by a fellow motorist but the car frame getting ripped off when the other driver leaves in a hurry.
  • The meek man repeatedly stopping at a
    freeway, asking for directions off the freeway. The hamburger stand man (Stan Freberg, uncredited ) eventually realizes he doesn't know the way off the freeway and had to open the stand to keep from starving to death. The meek man does the same, only his stand sells mustard and pickles to accompany the burgers.[3]

References

External links