The world's dumb-bells are writing the funniest film ever made. These lollapaloozas from the morning mail are genuine bonafide epistles received by business firms gathered from all over the world by Juliet Jowell, who has hundreds of them.
United States

If you have six minutes to spare and love dusty, weird relics from the early days of talkies, Dumb-Bell Letters No. 16 is a bizarre little treat. Anyone looking for an actual story or modern comedy will absolutely hate this, but history nerds who like laughing at dead people's typos will find it strangely charming. ✉️I...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Unknown Director

Unknown Director
Community
Log in to comment.
"If you have six minutes to spare and love dusty, weird relics from the early days of talkies, Dumb-Bell Letters No. 16 is a bizarre little treat. Anyone looking for an actual story or modern comedy will absolutely hate this, but history nerds who like laughing at dead people's typos will find it strangely charming. ✉️It is basically the 1930s equivalent of a "funny tweets" compilation. The whole premise is just a narrator reading real, incredibly stupid letters sent to businesses, which were col..."

