Screenland (Oct 1923-Mar 1924)

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4 Q4 rmouncmcj JUST as there is always something new and thrilling to learn about life, if you know how, so there is always something new and thrilling to see in motion pictures, if you know where. All life is Paramount's hunting ground for the material for the world's greatest entertainment, and all the rewards and trophies of the search are present at the theatre which proclaims: "It's a Paramount Picture." For Paramount to make the season's pictures of a new and startling bigness is but to be expected, but the films themselves contain the unexpected, the marvelous, to a refreshing degree. RELEASED AFTER NOVEMBER 1st, 1923 "His Children's Children" A Sam Wood production, with Bebe Daniels, Dorothy Mackaill, James Rennie, George Fawcett, Mary Eaton, Warner Oland, Hale Hamilton and others. Adapted by Monte Katterjohn from the famous novel by Arthur Train. "The Light That Failed" By Rudyard Kipling. A George Melford production, with Jacqueline Logan, Percy Marmont, Sigrid Holmquist and David Torrence. Scenario by F. McGrew Willis and Jack Cunningham. "The Spanish Dancer" Starring Pola Negri. A Herbert Brenon production, with Antonio Moreno, supported by Wallace Beery, Kathlyn Williams, Gareth Hughes, Adolphe Menjou and Robert Agnew. Written for the screen by June Mathis, and Beulah Marie Dix from the play "Don Cesar de Bazan," by Adolphe D'Ennery and P. S. P. Dumanoir. "Stephen Steps Out" Starring Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., with Theodore Roberts, supported by Noah Beery, Harry Myers, Forrest Robinson. Directed by Joseph Henabery. From the story by Richard Harding Davis. Scenario by Edfrid Bingham. "West of the Water Tower" Starring Glenn Hunter, with Ernest Torrence and May McAvoy. Supported by George Fawcett and Zazu Pitts. Directed by Rollin Sturgeon. Adapted by Doris Schroeder from the novel by Homer Croy. "Pied Piper Malone" Starring Thomas Meighan. Supported by Lois Wilson and a big cast. By Booth Tarkington. Directed by Alfred E. Green. Adapted by Tom Geraghty. "Wild Bill Hickok" Starring William S. Hart (in an original story by himself), supported by Ethel Grey Terry and featuring Bill Hart's Pinto Pony. Screen play by Albert Shelby Le Vino. "My Man" Starring Pola Negri. A Herbert Brenon production. Supported by Charles de Roche. Written for the screen by Fred Jackson from the play "Mon Homme" by Andre Picard and Francis Carco. "Big Brother" By Rex Beach. A Sam Wood production, with Tom Moore and a distinctive cast. Adapted for the screen by Monte Katterjohn. "When Knights Were Bold" Starring Glenn Hunter. Francis Wilson's famous comedy. By Charles Marlow. Edited and titled by Ralph Spence. "Flaming Barriers" A George Melford production, with Jacqueline Logan, Antonio Moreno, Theodore Roberts, Walter Hiers, Sigrid Holmquist. By Byron Morgan. Adapted by Jack Cunningham. "Triumph" Cecil B. DeMille's production, with Leatrice Joy and Rod La Rocque, from the Saturday Evening Post story by May Edginton. Adapted by Jeanie Macpherson. "The Humming Bird" Starring Gloria Swanson. An Allan Dwan production. From the play by Maude Fulton. Screen play by Julian Johnson. "The Stranger" A Joseph Henabery production with Richard Dix, Leatrice Joy, and Lewis Stone. From the story "The First and the Last" by John Galsworthy. Adapted by Bertram Millhauser. "The Call of the Canyon" A Zane Grey production, with Bebe Daniels, Richard Dix and Lois Wilson. Supported by Noah Beery, Ricardo Cortez and Charles Ogle. Adapted by Doris Schroeder. Directed by Victor Fleming. "Speejacks" A motion picture record of A. Y. Gowen's famous voyage around the world in a 98-foot motor boat. "Every Day Love" A William deMille production, with Jack Holt and Nita Naldi. Supported by Theodore Kosloff, Robert Edeson and Rod La Rocque. From the novel "Rita Coventry," by Julian Street. Screen play by Clara Beranger. "Argentine Love" Starring Gloria Swanson. Screen play by Julian Johnson from the story by Vicente Blasco Ibanez. An Allan Dwan production. "The Heritage of the Desert" A Zane Grey production, with Bebe Daniels and Ernest Torrence. Directed by Irvin Willat. Adapted by Doris Schroeder. "North of 36" James Cruze's production, with Jack Holt, Ernest Torrence and Lila Lee. By Emerson Hough. "Woman Proof" Starring Thomas Meighan. Story by George Ade. Directed by Alfred E. Green. IF ITS A PARAMOUNT PICTURE ITS THE BEST SHOW IN TOWN! FAMOUS P LAYERS-LAS KY CORPORATION ADOLPH ZUKOR,PNĀ»'Ant s