Willie and Tim in the Motor Car, also known as Fine Feathers Make Fine Birds is a 1905 British short silent comedy film directed by Percy Stow and produced by the Clarendon Film Company.
[1] A large touring car of British manufacture arrives at the front gate of a country estate.
The passengers remove their outer travelling garments, hand them to the chauffeur and enter the gate.
The chase ends when the car goes into a small lake, and the occupants are apprehended by the police.
As the waiter comes back and gives the passengers their drinks, the chauffeur arrives on his motorbike.
The man sitting next to the driver stands up, takes a card from the pocket of the coat he's wearing and shows it to the policeman who salutes and let the car go through.
The car enters from the left and the camera pans to follow it until it stops on a village square where a man is playing a barrel organ.
The passengers alight and they dance on the sound of the music before getting back in the car and driving away in a hurry.
[3] The film was preserved, for copyright purposes, as paper print in the collections of the Library of Congress.