Screenland (Feb-Oct 1949)

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Bob Pins set the smartest hair-do's stronger grip— won't slip out Your hair is short and to the point this season. The new brief styles are easy on the eyes — easy to set, yourself, with DeLong Bob Pins. DeLong Bob Pins, with their new rounded ends, slide in easily, stay in indefinitely. Get DeLong Bob Pins on the famous blue card. The Short Halocreated by Helen Hunt, famous Hollywood hair stylist. Make 8 rows of pin curls. Work clockwise from left part toward face. Pull hair slightly forward as you pin. Brush out hair upward, away from face. Let ends fall forward. Brush back hair upward. You're always "sel"' with DeLong Curl Setting Pins . Hair Pins . Safety Pins Hooks and Eyes • Snaps . Pins Hook and Eye Tapes . Sanitary Belts Bob Montgomery takes a sock at Charles McGraw for interrupting his motel rendezvous with Ann Blyth in "Once More, My Darling." In "Task Force," Gary Cooper and Walter Brennan are Naval officers who get into a peck of trouble for their views on Air versus Sea. Love Happy United Artists DISAPPOINTING potpourri of nonsense starring the Marx Brothers. Groucho is a "private eye" who solves the mystery of the lost Romanoff necklace. Sought after by a sultry international jewel thief, Ilona Massey, the necklace is smuggled into this country in a sardine tin. Before she can latch onto the sardine tin, Harpo, a kleptomaniac, klepting for a troupe of hungry young actors and actresses, gets it first and the chase is on. The succeeding mix-ups and hair-brained folderol have not sufficient strength to warrant the Marx Brothers being wasted in a picture of this type. However, their efforts are bound to get plenty of laughter because (1 ) people like the Marx Brothers no matter what, and (2) others will laugh out of sheer habit, and (3) this group will laugh because they are being influenced by the other two groups . . . Anna Lucasta Columbia ADAPTED from the stage success of the same name, Paulette Goddard is the girl who turned "bad" after running away from home. Her eventual return to the impoverished home in a Pennsylvania mining town is not so much love for her family, but rather that her brother-in-law, Broderick Crawford, has a scheme to marry her off to a young farmer with $.5,000 in cold, hard cash. Using Anna as bait, he and the rest of the conniving members of the family hope to fall heirs to the money. The plan works only in that the young man, William Bishop, falls in love with Anna despite the fact that her father, Oscar Homolka, tells him in no uncertain terms the kind of girl she is. With her father always bringing up a dark "lurid" past — his reasons are strictly Freudian — Anna decides a decent life is not for her. On her wedding day, she leaves Pennsylvania for a return engagement on the Brooklyn waterfront. Only this time, when she tries to take up where she left off, Anna fails because of her husband whom she really loves. A stark drama from start to finish, there is much to recommend here including performances by John Ireland, William Geer and everyone else concerned with the repercussions of an unstable mind. It's A Great Feeling Warner Brothers (Technicolor) YOU can say that again, and probably will after you take in this nifty musicomedy starring Jack Carson, Dennis Morgan and Doris Day. Of course, there's a plot— something to do with a waitress, Doris, who's dead set on getting into pictures, and two screwballs, Carson and Morgan, who play themselves and are already in movies — Warner Brothers that is. In fact, you might say Warner Brothers stars in its own picture. There's a lot of clever spoofing about Diana Lynn and Jerry Lewis are caught in an embarrassing moment in "My Friend Irma." 14