Canadian Film Weekly (Jan 21, 1942)

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Paramount THE REMARKABLE ANDREW A fanciful drama about a bookkeeper asked to strike a fraudulent balance of the municipal books of which he has charge. He refuses and is railroaded by all the city officers from the judge to the mayor. With no lawyer to defend him, the ghost of Andrew Jackson comes to inspire him. Jackson summons George Washington, Ben Franklin and other historic gentlemen and the conspirators are routed. The result is pictured as a triumph for democracy and some fine sentiment gets voiced in the picture. There’s nothing to believe. You just sit back and enjoy it. It’s human enough to make anybody warm up to it. William Holden is the conscientious bookkeeper, Ellen Drew his faithful sweetheart and Brian Donlevy is the hard-drinking General Jackson. It’s escape stuff of a kind that is welcome these days. Empire-Universal MELODY LANE Another of Universal’s compact and pleasing comedies with a mere thread of a story and plenty of pep and personality. Various members of the cast sing and play eight new numbers. Several of these are handled by the ever-pleasing Merry Macs, who are picking up a large neighborhood following by their reguar and always pleasing renditions. Leon Errol is the music-mad sponsor of Cornies, a cereal. He insists on playing with every band hired by the advertising agency for his radio show. From records he picks a band led by Robert Paige. Only his amorous inclinations for the agency’s representative, Anne Gwynne, causes Paige to leave the small town to take the contract. Baby Sandy, Butch and Buddy and Don Douglas pad the thing out satisfactorily. For what it is, since it makes no claims to elaborateness, the picture is entirely satisfactory and will serve to spice a program. RKO JOAN OF PARIS A good picture that is just short of being powerful fare, though it’s good enough for anybody’s money and time. It has a timely subject and is solidly cast. Though Michele Morgan and Paul Henried are new: names in America they are supported by such strong pullers-in as Thomas Mitchell, May Robson and Laird Cregar. Even if it starts better than it finishes, the elements are there for some fine promotion. It is a story of France of the moment, with the theme drawn from Joan of Arc. Henried is a Frenchman of the De Gaul’ia stamp flying’ with the RAF. With four companions he is brought down over France. After sundry adventures they work their way to Paris where Thomas Mitchell, a priest, puts them in touch with the underground movement. Michele Morgan is a waitress who falls in love with Henried, joins the movement and helps the airmen escape to England. There was a great chance here for an unusually strong boxoffice picture. It should, however, do very well. SING YOUR WORRIES AWAY A light musical about two cousins, male and female, who are in line for a big legacy but don’t know it—Bert Lahr and Dorothy Lovett respectively. The girl’s boss, 2 hoodlum, knows it and tries to marry her while aiming to worry Lahr into knocking himself off. It’s all very pleasant, with no pressure on your thinking apparatus. It has a backstage and nightclub atmosphere, some good comedy and legitimate musical numbers, as well as Alvino Rey and his Orchestra, aided by the singing King Sisters. There’s some competent and popular people on hand— Patsy Kelly, June Havoc, Buddy Ebsen, Sam Levene, Margaret Dumont and others. Plenty of comedy and entertaining music. Canadian FILM WEEKLY Pr. ge PR SS January 21st, 1942 RPO, we . , hak: @® ) Ia as is 3 = th mitre & ee i Columbia CONFESSIONS OF BOSTON BLACKIE While this B offering is shy of mystery and its other side, revelation, yet it hurries along at a good clip, being always ahead of the audience—but just far enough ahead. This issue of the popular series is well played, well directed and well photographed. There should be no complaints from either exhibitor or audience. Chester Morris, who plays the gent with the Beantown monicker, is on a casual visit to an art auction to help a pal buy a statue of Augustus Caesar. The statue is a phoney, a substitute for the real one, the property of Harriet Hilliard. The genuine piece of art has been pocketed by the fakers who run the place. When Miss Hilliard is shot at as she is about to reveal the fraud, the bullet kills one of the conspirators. Blackie is accused of the murder. The rest of it has to do with his fighting botl cops and robbers. : In the cast are George E. Stone, Richard Lane and Joan Woodbury. HONOLULU LU It’s Lupe Velez and if your customers like her that’s all you need to know. She’s the niece of a swindler, Leo Carrillo who tires of his thievery and quits him to become a burlesque queen. She falls in love with a sailor and wins a contest for the crown of Miss Honolulu. @ Big Buildup For ‘49th Parallel’ One of the most elaborate presentation of a film in Canadian history will accompany the forthcoming -debut of the long-awaited and much-talked-about ‘49th Parallel.” Ottawa, sober and hard-working, will don the spangles and braid for the opening on January 29th at the Capitol Theatre. The GovernorGeneral will address the gathering. Raymond Massey has promised to be present and messages from Britain via radio will be delivered by Laurence Olivier and Leslie Howare currently busy in Britain on are curently busy in Britain on more pictures. , The Ottawa welcome will be carried by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation network from coast to coast. The picture was made in two countries, Canada and Britain, and was supposed to have cost almost $1,000,000. Columbia is handling distribution on this side of the water. Davjd Coplan, who has since departed from Columbia for United Artists, will supervise its debut as business to be finished for his former outfit and Jimmy Cowan, well-known Canadian publicity man, is handling that end. Besides Howard, Olivier and Massey, the film features Anton Walbrook, Eric Portman and a new feminine star, 16-year old Glynis Johns. Elizabeth Bergner won much unfavorable publicity when she started in’ the picture and withdrew when the company left Canada for Britain. Plane Plant Pic Adhering to the topical policy for which the studio is noted, Warner Bros. will produce the first motion picture based on the allout effort of the American airplane industry to provide the huge number of war planes President Roosevelt has set as the nation’s goal. The picture, scheduled to go into production immediately, is entitled “The Shadow of Their Wings.” Its cast is headed by Ann Sheridan, Ronald Reagan, Dennis Morgan and George Tobias. Lloyd Bacon is the director. Casting of Miss Sheridan and Reagan marks the third successive picture in which they have been teamed, the other two being “Kings Row” and “Juke Girl,” both still unreleased. Rank New Chairman J. Arthur Rank was elected chairman of the board of Odeon Theatres, Ltd., circuit, succeeding the late Oscar Deutsch, at a meeting on Friday. Rank, in association with Lord Portal and C. M. Woolf, recently acquired control of Gaumont-British from the Ostrer interests. He for some time has been chairman of General Film Distributors and Pinewood Studios. Complete Theatre Equipment and Supplies COLEMAN ELECTRIC CO. 258 VICTORIA ST., Toronto, Ont.