Canadian Film Weekly (Dec 13, 1944)

Record Details:

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bb REVIEWS INFORMATION RATINGS Vol. 9, No. 50 Song of the Open Road with Jane Powell, Bonita Granville UA-Rogers 93 Mins. LIGHT, YOUTHFUL ENTERTAINMENT OFFERED BY MUSICAL; JANE POWELL A HIT IN FILM DEBUT. Invested with the spirit of youth, “Song of the Open Road,” a Charles R. Rogers production, is an order of sweetness and charm served to the accompani ment of music hot and soft. The film presents a wide range of entertainment all expertly geared to the popular taste, panning out as a light and gay affair with a tear thrown in. The presence of Jane Powell, young radio singer on _ the Charlie McCarthy-Edgar Bergen air show, gives film special interest. The youngster’s work in her first film role fully justifies Rogers’ faith in her. Wholesome and refreshing, Miss Powell plays with suprising self-assurance a juvenile film star who rebels at the drudgery and_ restrictions imposed upon her by her screen work. The girl has an unusually beautiful voice that will gain her immediate favor with film andiences. Some extremely pleasant tunes have been written for her by Walter Kent and Kim Gannon. Brought into the proceedings for their box office value are McCarthy, Bergen and W. C. Fields, with the Sammy Kaye and Chuck Faulkner band being a special concession to the young element. The Albert Mannheimer screenplay, which stems from a yarn by Irving Phillips and Edward Verdier, has Miss Powell running away from home in search of youthful companionship. Hiding her identity, the girl finds fun and happiness with a bunch of young people at a youth hostel. They take an aversion to her, but she wins them over after she is compeled to reveal her identity. Meanwhile her mother (Rose Hobart) is carrying on a search for her. Produced by Rogers with true showmanship, the film has been accorded fluent and lively direction by S. Sylvan Simon. CAST: Charlie McCarthy, Edgar Bergen, Jane Powell, W. C. Fields, Bonita, Granville, Sammy Kaye end orchestra, Peggy O'Neill, Jackie Moran, Bill Christy, Reginald Denny, Regis Toomey, Rose Hobart, Sig Arno, Irene Tedro, Pat Star DIRECTION, Good, PHOTOGRAPHY, Good, REVIEWS FROM FILM DAILY. NEW YORK Marriage is a Private Affair with Lana Turner, James Craig, John Hodiak M-G-M 116 Mins. JUICY STORY OF LOOSE MARTIAL TIES PROVES FITTING VEHICLE FOR LANA’S RETURN TO FILMS. Although the footage may seem heavy at times, Lana’s beauty and performance after an absence of more than a year from films, does much to overcome this tension. A nice casting job to balance off the two love triangles woven into the story give Frances Gifford and Hugh Marlowe an opportunity for special plaudits. Pandro S. Berman has provided Robert Z. Leonard with a com plementary production to enhance the directional values which were obviously handled with deft understanding. The story has Turner portraying the role of the daughter of a much-married socialite whose escapades have influenced Lana’s careless manner. A series of misunderstandings after a hasty marriage is finally ironed out and Lana realizes that the man she married is her true love. Here’s a dramatic effort that pleads the feminine rights to the adage “youth must have its fling.” CAST: Lana Turner, James Craig, John Hodiak, Frances Gifford, Hugh Marlowe, Natslie Schafer, Keenan Wynn, Herbert Rudley, Paul Cavanaugh, Morris Ankrum, Jane Green, Tom Drake. CREDITS: Producer, Pandre S. Berman; Director, Robert Z. Leonard; Screenplay, David Hertz and Lenore Coffee; Based on the novel by Judith Kelly; Cameraman, Ray June; Musical Score, Bronislau Kaper; Sound, Douglas Shearer; Art Directors, Cedric Gibbons and Hubert B. Hobson; Set Decorator, Edwin B. Willis; Costumes, Irene; Makeun, Jack Dawn; Film Editor, George White. DIRECTION, Fine. PHOTOGRAPHY, Oscar Doob Given Canadian Award Oscar A. Doob, Loew Theatre's ad and publicity director and director of the Washington War Finance Committee in the USA's Third War Loan Drive, helped the Canadian government in one of our Victory Loans. He has been presented with a gold Canadian coin inscribed, “Canada Thanks Oscar A. Doob.” Francis Harmon, WAC vice-chairman and co-ordinator, gave Doob the award on behalf of the Canadian government at a recent meeting None But the Lonely Heart with Cary Grant, Ethel Barrymore RKO 113 Mins. CHIEF ASSET OF THIS ONE IS ITS SOCIAL CONSCIOUSNESS; PIc PROVES HEAVY GOING. A depressing recital of the personal history of a free soul born of the London slums, the film verRichard best-seller is likely to catch the sion of the Llewellyn fancy of those who take an unduly serious approach to life. The production displays a social consciousness that will advance its cause among certain groups of our population. It is too bad that the story of a life-loving knockabout faced with the bitter realities of life has not been developed more coherently or with greater regard for the elements of entertainment. The story is a loose affair often moving at a pace that is painfully slow. Few will be those who will escape a feeling of tedious ness. To make matters worse, the cockney accents render much of the dialogue difficult to the ear. Our hero is compelled to turn to crime to ease the final moments of his mother, a victim of cancer, and to enable him to obtain the wherewithal to be married to the former wife of the criminal boss for whom he is working. He loses girl as well as mother in a most unhappy ending. The acting is one of the best things ahout the film. Cary Grant does wel] in the top role. Ethel Barrymore is outstanding in her return to pictures. June Duprez is the girl Grant loses. Produced impressively by David Hempstead, the film has heavyhanded direction by Clifford Odets. CAST: Cary Grant, Ethel Barrymore, Barry Fitzgerald, Jume Duprez, Jane Wyatt, George Coulouris, Dan Duryea, Roman Bohnen, Konstantin Shayne, Eva Leonard Boyne, Morten Lowry, Helen Thimig, Williem Chelee. CREDITS: Producer, David Hempstead; Associate Producer, Sherman Todd; Director, Clifford Odets; Screenplay, Clifford Odets; Based on novel by Richard Liew. ellyn; Cameraman, George Barnes; Special Effects, Vernon L. Walker; Art Directors, Albert S. D'Agostino, Jack Okey; Set Decorators, Darrell Silvera, Harley Miller; Sound, Richard Van Hessen; Musical Score, Hanns Eisler; Musical Director, C. Bakaleinikoff; Film Editor, Roeland Gross. DIRECTION, Static. PHOTOGRAPHY, Fine. $2.00 Per Annum Bowery to Broadway with Jack Ozkie, Donald Cook, Susanna Foster Universal « Mins. ACE MUSICAL, ONE OF UNIVERSAL’S BEST, HAS MAKINGS OF A BOX OFFICE HIT. Unalloyed entertainment wield ing a popular appeal, “Bowery to Broadway” is one of potent the prize musicals to come from little of everything has gone into the the Universal lot. A film's making. Not one moment of the production is devoid of diversion. Producer John Grant has brought the true showman’s spirit to the task in hand. The result is a film weighty with talent and prodigal in its staging. The company has not been above using such players as Maria Montez, Louise Allbritton, Donald O'Connor, Peggy Ryan, Andy Devine, Ann Blyth, Evelyn Ankers and Leo Carrillo in limited roles in an attempt to make this a surefire box office piece. The film, directed beautifully by Charles Lament, has been built around the framework of a familiar story, the one about the ups and downs of show business. The subject has been handled so competently that one loses sight of the formula. The plot deals with the rivalry between a pair of showmen, Jack Oakie and Donald Cook, in the golden days of the theatre. The two eventually pool their forces for a smashing success. Cook and Miss Montez and Susanna Foster and Turhan Bey are paired romantically The film is rich in swell performances. Oakie’s comedy is outstanding, as is the singing of Miss Foster. CAST: Jack Oakie, Denald Cook, Susan na Foster, Turban Bey, Maria Montez, Leuise Allbritton, Andy Devine, Frank McHugh, George Dolenz, Rosemary De Camp, Ann Blyth, Themas Gomez, Leo Carville, Evelyn Ankers, Maude Eburne, Donald O'Conner, Peggy Ryan, Ben Car ter, Mentan Moreland, Richard Lane, Rohbert Warwick. CREDITS: Preducer, John Grant; Di. rector, Charles Lamont; Screenplay, Ed mund Jeseph, Bert Lytten, Arthur T Herman; Cameraman, Charles Van Enger; Supervising Art Director, John B. Good. man; Sound . Bernard B&B. Brown; Musica! Director, Edwerd Ward; Film Editor, Arthur Hilton; Dance Directers, Carlos Romero, John Boyle, Louis Da Pron; Set Decorators, Russell A. Gaus. man, Ted Von Hemert. DIRECTION, Good. PHOTOGRAPHY, Good,