Modern Screen (Dec 1949 - Nov 1950)

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SHAMPOO Perfumed with famous Old Spice NO FEDERAL TAX REQUIRED Wonderful, up-to-the-minute shampoo formula leaves your hair shining clean, dandruff free, easy to manage. And perfumes your hair with famous Old Spice! At Drug and Department Stores SHULTON Rockefeller Center. New York is after him, and so is Lawrence Tierney. Tierney gets to him first, but even as he shoots him dead, Howard's lingers reach up, squeeze the bulb, open the shutter on his camera, and he gets a perlect portrait of his murderer. What a man. What a movie. Cast: Howard Duff, Brian Donlevy, Peggy Dow, Lawrence Tierney. — Universal-International. THE TOAST OF NEW ORLEANS Down along the Louisiana bayous ( what ever they are), everybody lishes. sings, throws women around, and has a joyous, virile time of it. Mario Lanza and Uncle J. Carroll Naish are two such hedonists, until opera impresario David Niven comes to town, hears Mario's magnificent — if uncultured — voice, and takes him back to New Orleans to train. Niven likes to discover talent, has built Kathryn Grayson into a star, intends to do the same with Mario. Mario falls in love with Kathryn. Kathryn teaches Mario good manners, and breaks his spirit. He gets his spirit back. There's Technicolor, some exciting shots of old New Orleans, or what I fondly expect old New Orleans must have looked like (I don't know if this picture was shot in Hollywood or on location), a lot of enjoyable singing, and another prize performance by J. Carrol Naish. Cast: Kathryn Grayson. Mario Lanza, David Niven, J. Carroll Naish. — MGM. THE BREAKING POINT The Breaking Point is an unusually exciting picture. It has salty, stimulating, Hemingway-like dialogue (it's based on a story by Hemingway, and I'll bet a lot of the movie's speeches came straight from the book), its people are human, moody, and so real they often don't understand each other. Harry Morgan (John Garfield) is a fisherman. He owns a boat which can be char tered (he still owes money on it), he has a wife and two kids whom he loves. He gets into trouble when a man who hires him to sail to Mexico runs out without paying his bill, and Harry agrees to smuggle some Chinese aboard his boat, in order to get money to come home. He murders a man in selfdefense, has his boat impounded by the Coast Guard (which has had wind of the Mexican adventure), gets in even deeper trouble with a gang of trigger-happy thieves, and is pursued throughout by Pat Neal, who can't believe he loves his wife so much he hasn't got a little attention left for her. There's nothing soft about this picture. It deals with elemental human emotions like hate and fear and the deep earthy need and satisfaction that's possible between some men and women. I've never liked Pat Neal before, yet I liked her enormously here; Wallace Ford as a frightened shyster lawyer is superb; there's adventure, sex, wry humor and a lot of other notable stuff in The Breaking Point. Cast: John Garfield. Patricia Neal, Phyllis Thaxter. — Warners. SADDLE TRAMP Through a series of accidents, Joel McCrea, cowboy, who likes to wander the West without responsibilities, finds himself saddled with four orphaned children whose eyes are big, but whose mouths are bigger. He has to feed these junior G-men, so he takes a job on a ranch. Rancher hates kids; Joel hides kids out in the woods, and smuggles food to them nightly. While he's gone one day, kids adopt Wanda Hendrix, who's fleeing from her lustful uncle, and there's one more hungry piece of trouble in Joel's life. Now Joel's boss is feuding with a ranch-owner next door, a Mexican named Martinez, and Joel's boss' wife is a kind of cracked Irish lady who believes in "little people," but everything works out fire. Joel settles the feud, marries Wanda, adopts the four children, and tells his itchy feet they're home to stay. Casr: Joel McCrea. Wanda Hendrix, John Russell. — Universal-International. DARK CITY A bookie (Charlton Heston) and a night club singer (Lizabeth Scott) are the tortured lovers in this one. Charlton, who's had a horrid time in the army (his wife done him wrong ^1 doesn't want to get "involved,"