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- This 1924 cartoon features an animated KoKo the Clown and a live-action Max Fleischer. Max has invented a new, electric, drawing device. He uses this to finish the drawing and then, with a somewhat maniacal grin on his face, he turns the device on poor, hapless KoKo.
- Max helps the Inkwell Clown prepare for a family reunion.
- My Old Kentucky home is the first sound cartoon ever produced and finds a dog getting ready for dinner as the story takes us into a sing-a-long with "My Old Kentucky Home".
- A hand drawn clown begins interrupting an animator's attempt to draw which in turn leads to the animator spending all his efforts on trying to trap the clown.
- Ko-Ko, the Inkwell Clown leaps off the paper and follows a telephone wire to the cinema projectionist. Once inside the projector, the clown draws a mechanical dancing girl and soon falls in love. But the romance is not to be.
- Ko-Ko is chased by a cartoony spider while Max deals with a mouse in his office.
- Neighborhood cats come to the tiny Ko-Ko Theatre to watch Ko-Ko and Fitz stage a variety of entertaining acts, from acrobatics to high-diving to statuelike tableaux vivants.
- A birthday celebration with Max Fleischer's Inkwell Clown, Koko.
- Koko the Clown plants a jumping bean that becomes a beanstalk. Later, he creates duplicates of himself and attacks his creator.
- The Inkwell Clown tries to defend himself against a swarm of flies.
- Chased by Father Time, Ko-Ko runs through time and into the futuristic world of 1999. There, Ko-Ko finds a mechanical barber, an automated feeding machine, and even an instant marriage.
- Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown spends a vacation at a rubbery amusement park.
- Max and the Inkwell Clown compete to see who can blow the largest bubble.
- An illustration of the basic principles of Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity.
- Ko-Ko gathers eggs on a farm while Max works on an incubator.
- Max goes to bed, leaving Ko-Ko at the peak of a steep mountain. Ko-Ko doesn't stay perched for long, and soon finds himself battling strong winds and upsetting a giant, before entering the real world to exact his revenge on a sleeping Max.
- The Inkwell Clown watches Max handle the payroll and wants to be paid like everybody else. Later, the cameraman Clown captures a burglary on film and helps Max catch the culprit.
- Ko-Ko the clown and his glee club lead the audience in an early follow-the-bouncing-ball sing-along.
- The Inkwell Clown runs away from Max and winds up falling through a crack in the floorboards and into a fiery Hell.
- Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown sculpts a bust of Max out of a lump of clay, and later enters a clay village.
- Photography is manipulated in slow-motion, reverse-motion, and freeze-frame to analyze the movement of horses, chickens, typing fingers, an Olympic long-jumper, and a lump of sugar dropped into milk.
- In this Christmas season release, Max assembles a toy train track while Ko-Ko the Clown visits a cartoon toyland, playing cops and robbers and rescuing a doll in distress.
- Max draws a circus poster featuring Ko-Ko the Clown and Fitz the dog, but the circus owner wants them replaced with a giant. On the poster, Ko-Ko and Fitz find ways to take on their oversized rival.
- Ko-Ko shapes an unattractive cartoon woman into his own ideal and enters her into a beauty contest. Then Max shrinks down to intervene in a struggle between Ko-Ko and a tiny dancing girl.
- A Native American artist with a feather headdress offers his work to Max, and Ko-Ko takes the place of a cartoon Indian character, who seeks revenge against Ko-Ko and his dog pal.
- The Inkwell Clown and his three partners rehearse their parts in a show while en route to the theatre in Max's car.
- After waking a snoring Max, the Inkwell Clown battles the artist's avatar in a boxing match.
- The Inkwell Clown endeavors to reach his sweetheart at the top of a cliff, but the two must save each other when their cartoon landscape is flooded by an ink hose. Max wears a blindfold to meet a surprise visitor and wanders off the roof.
- With Max shooting target practice in his studio, KoKo and Fitz find themselves ascending to heaven and learning the ropes of angelhood. But they end up back on Earth, dodging bullets in Max's real-world duck-shooting gallery.
- While Max is off fishing with a buddy, the Inkwell Clown is pulled into his cartoon fishing hole and encounters all manner of sea creatures. Then the clown decides to cause a little real-world havoc for Max on his fishing island.
- Max torments the Inkwell Clown with shadow puppet animals.
- Koko and Fitz face surrealistic hijinks aboard their train in the cartoon world, before entering the real world and taking control of the train on which Max is a passenger.
- Ko-Ko and Fitz find that everything in their cartoon world is moving backwards. After entering the real world, they go inside a clock and move the hands backward, causing life all around the city to run in reverse.
- A sing-along cartoon to the song "Jingle Bells".
- Ko-Ko competes against a rival clown in a race.
- Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown and a baby get caught in a hurricane.
- Ko-Ko and Fitz assume control of an insane asylum.
- Ko-Ko hosts a vaudeville revue featuring rope tricks, an equestrian act, trained seals, and stage magic.
- Max has a toothache, and it's up to The Clown and a bespectacled rabbit to pull out the aching tooth.
- While Max shaves at the sink, Ko-Ko runs his own wacky barbershop. Things get out of hand when Ko-Ko takes his scissors on a cutting spree all over town, and then causes mischief for Max with a bottle of hair tonic.