Canadian Film Weekly (Apr 1, 1942)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

Page 4 Canadian FILM WEEKLY April Ist, 1942 Vitagraph THE MALE ANIMAL Payoff: A picture which has enough varied elements to appeal to such diverse breeds as professors and football fans at the same time. And others, too. It’s lively, funny and interesting. Story: Henry Fonda, professor of English, gets baited by Red witch-hunters when he tries to read Vanzetti’s last speech to his class. It upsets the campus and his home life with Olivia de Haviland. Jack Carson is the old sweetheart, ex-football star, who renews his romance with Fonda’s wife. Fonda gets his back up, wins his wife back and reads the disputed speech. Eugene Pallette does a good job as a Babbit. Sizeup: There’s some beautiful satire on football rally nonsense for those who catch on. The Intellectuals will come out of the ivory towers to see this one. JUKE GIRL Payoff: Lusty, brawling story of migratory workers and their frontier-like settlements. Loaded with action and Ann Sheridan. Ronald Reagan and Richard Whorf carry the male leads. Story: Reagan and Whorf are a couple of hoboes heading for harvests. Sheridan is a hostess in low-class dancehalls relying on juke boxes for jazz. They meet in a town dominated by produce buyer Gene Lockhart, who squeezes the farmers. George Tobias revolts against Lockhart’s domination and Reagan joins him, with Whorf going to the other side. A lynch mob wants to string up Sheridan and Reagan for the murder of Tobias but Whorf goes right again and helps stand it off. Sizeup: Sex, singing, the underdog winning out and plenty of fisticuffs. Plenty to recommend it. . RKO THE TUTTLES OF TAHITI Payoff: A thoroughly enjoyable and relaxing picture filled with cheer. It has everything in it but villainy and pathos. Story: The Tuttles are a happy-go-lucky, improvident and semi-moronic clan filled with the joy of living and with no thought of tomorrow. Thus it is a grand piece of escapist art. Charles Laughton, as Jonas Tuttle, is always in debt and gives only an occasional thought to it. But Providence sticks it nose in all the time—and right on time. Sizeup: The casual attitude towards life of the Tuttles and their expression of it will provide a happy period for the audience. Charles Laughton is at his best in his most sympathetic role to date. Another splendid job is Adeline de Walt Reynold’s playing of the grandmother. A large cast surrounds Mr. Laughton and in it are Jon Hall and Peggy Drake, sweethearts. THE MAYOR OF 44th STREET Payoff: Gangsters and jive—which means juveniles and jitterbugs. It’s fast and has such names as George Murphy, Anne Shirley and old-timer Richard Barthelmess. Also Freddy Martin and his band. Story: It’s based on something unique out of Manhattan’s recent doings—a gamg of several hundred kids used to cheer or ruin performances. Here they mainly ruin things while being led by Rex Downing. Murphy, dancehall impressario and ex-hoodlum going straight, wins Downing over—but Barthelmess, exracket king just sprung, wins him back. Barthelmess is intent on taking over where he left off and has Murphy to beat. Sizeup: It’s okay for spots that want shooting sprees, etc. Plenty of good music. William Gargan is handy. Columbia TWO YANKS IN TRINIDAD Payoff: Strong half of a double bill. Story: Pat O’Brien and Brian Donlevy are a couple of racketeers who have a falling out. O’Brien joins the army on the lam and Donlevy does the same. They keep. feuding until a heroic deed, which they share, unites them. Sizeup: O’Brien and Donlevy offer their standard line, which is always popular with fans. That’s about all there is to the _ picture. Strictly a personality display. Regal KID GLOVE KILLER Payoff: A crackerjack B mystery that’s more enthralling than many an A-budget offering. It makes most whodunits look 20 years behind the times in its easily-followed presentation of scientific crime detection methods. Story: The mayor is murdered and Van Heflin, city criminologist, finds the killer through a trail of musclemen and reformers. You know who the killer is all the time but its engrossing to watch how he’s tracked down in the new way. Sizeup: Van Heflin, a fine young actor, will probably attract more patrons to this than was expected because of his performance in “Johnny Eager.” And this will please them mightily. It’s highly intelligent and everything that happens is extremely likely. Marsha Hunt is his assistant and the writers were smart in avoiding the scatterbrained character who crimps things. Instead Miss Hunt fits in perfectly. Lee Bowman and Samuel S. Hinds, as well as Eddie Quillan and John Litel, keep it moving fast. Monogram I KILLED THAT MAN Payoff: Murder mystery that’ll barely do. Story: Ricardo Cortez, district attorney, runs down a poisoned needle thrower and exposes crime in high places. Sizeup: Herbert Rawlinson and Jack Mulhall will catch the eye of old-timers. No horror, no excitement and little mystery. Republic THE CARTER CASE Payoff: A good mystery story, fast and with occasional laughter. Story: Fashion editor is bumped off and assistant district attorney James Ellison and his interfering sweetheart-reporter. Virginia Gilmore, turn up the killer. Sizeup: Franklin Pangborn and Lynn Carver lend good service, Paramount HENRY AND DIZZY Payoff: Suitable fodder for the Aldrich family fans. Will please them. Story: The loss of a borrowed motorboat and how to pay for it leads Jimmy Lydon, as Henry, and Charlie Smith, as Dizzy, into humorous complications. Sizeup: Mary Anderson, Warren Hymer, John Litel and Vaughn Glaser on hand. New York Revivals Dark Journey—1937 spy melodrama; C. Veidt, V. Leigh. Evergreen—1935 musical comedy; J. Matthews, S. Hale. His Girl Friday—1940 comedy; C. Things To Come—i936 dramatization of H. G. Wells’ prophetic novel of the next World War; Raymond Massey, Cedric Hardwicke. Grant, R. Russell. Holiday—1938 comedy; Cc. Grant. In Old Chicago—1938 drama; A. Faye, T. Power, D. Ameche, A. Brady. King of MKings—1929. Life of Christ; H. B. Warner, J. Logan. Lost Horizon—1937. Film dramatization of Hilton’s novel; R. Colman, J. Wyatt. Love from a Stranger—1937 psychopathic melodrama; A, Harding, B. Rathbone. Mata Hari—1932 World War spy story; Garbo. Scarlet Pimpernel—1935 castume drama; M. Oberon, L. Howard. Hepburn, Mr. & Mrs. Smith—i1941 marital farce; C. Lombard, R. Montgomery. Navy Blue And Gold—1937 Annapolis football picture; Robt. Young, J. Stewart. Northwest Passage—1940 technicolor adventure tale; S. Tracy, Robt. Young, W. Brennan. Of Human Bondage—1934 drama; L. Howard, B. Davis. Primrose Path—1940 drama; Rogers, J. McRea. Prisoner of Zenda—1937 costume drama; M. Carroll, R. Colman. Rembrandt—1937 historical; Chas. Laughton. G.