The Cameraman (1928): Buster Keaton pantomimes a one-man game at Yankee Stadium, even taking the role of the umpire.
Dizzy & Daffy (1934): Lefty (Shemp Howard) makes a mockery of the game in this comic biopic of Dizzy and Daffy Dean.
Alibi Ike (1935): Joe E. Brown plays the infuriating title character, a rookie for the Cubs with excuses for everything, in this adaptation of Ring Lardner's story.
The Fowl Ball Player (1940): Cavemen play baseball.
The Screwball (1943): Woody Woodpecker sneaks into a baseball field and ends up playing in the game.
Tokio Jokio (1943): A mock newsreel introduces the Japanese "King of Swat" who promptly pulls a flyswatter out of his baseball uniform and swats at a fly (and misses).
Baseball Bugs (1946): Bugs Bunny is a one-rabbit baseball team vs. The Gas-house Gorillas.
Wild and Woody! (1948): Woody Woodpecker dons a catcher's outfit and catches the bullets that Buzzy Buzzard shoots at him. A moment later, he's the batter who slams Buzzy to the other side of the saloon.
It Happens Every Spring (1949): A scientist (Ray Milland) discovers a formula that makes a baseball which is repelled by wood.
Bunker Hill Bunny (1950): Sam von Schmamm the Hessian throws a bomb at Bugs Bunny. Bugs puts on a baseball uniform, takes a baseball bat and hits the bomb back to Sam.
Rhubarb (1951): A cat inherits a baseball team. Ray Milland plays the feral kitty's legal guardian.
Speedy Gonzales (1955): Sylvester uses a mitt to catch Speedy Gonzales. He gets a baseball instead.
The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988): Lt. Frank Drebin (Leslie Nielsen) poses as an umpire in a desperate attempt to extend a game.
BASEketball (1998): Goofballs play a game that's a combination of baseball and basketball.
Dizzy & Daffy (1934): Lefty (Shemp Howard) makes a mockery of the game in this comic biopic of Dizzy and Daffy Dean.
Alibi Ike (1935): Joe E. Brown plays the infuriating title character, a rookie for the Cubs with excuses for everything, in this adaptation of Ring Lardner's story.
The Fowl Ball Player (1940): Cavemen play baseball.
The Screwball (1943): Woody Woodpecker sneaks into a baseball field and ends up playing in the game.
Tokio Jokio (1943): A mock newsreel introduces the Japanese "King of Swat" who promptly pulls a flyswatter out of his baseball uniform and swats at a fly (and misses).
Baseball Bugs (1946): Bugs Bunny is a one-rabbit baseball team vs. The Gas-house Gorillas.
Wild and Woody! (1948): Woody Woodpecker dons a catcher's outfit and catches the bullets that Buzzy Buzzard shoots at him. A moment later, he's the batter who slams Buzzy to the other side of the saloon.
It Happens Every Spring (1949): A scientist (Ray Milland) discovers a formula that makes a baseball which is repelled by wood.
Bunker Hill Bunny (1950): Sam von Schmamm the Hessian throws a bomb at Bugs Bunny. Bugs puts on a baseball uniform, takes a baseball bat and hits the bomb back to Sam.
Rhubarb (1951): A cat inherits a baseball team. Ray Milland plays the feral kitty's legal guardian.
Speedy Gonzales (1955): Sylvester uses a mitt to catch Speedy Gonzales. He gets a baseball instead.
The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988): Lt. Frank Drebin (Leslie Nielsen) poses as an umpire in a desperate attempt to extend a game.
BASEketball (1998): Goofballs play a game that's a combination of baseball and basketball.
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