Canadian Film Weekly (Feb 7, 1945)

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e A c ei “he 5 ¥ » | et i Bee UA's ‘Tomorrow the World’ Is of Major Interest United Artists’ “Tomorrow the World,” produced by Lester Cowan, gives some evidence of what the screen material of the near _ future will be like and how valuable it is when it receives the finest technical treatment. Cowan has taken the problem that even now is occupying almost. general attention, that of how to treat and what to do with poisoned Nazi youth, and made it into an absorbing screen document. It is the story of a German boy poisoned with Nazi doctrines and how this condition influences his behaviour and affects the lives of the people around him. As that boy Skippy Homeier gives one of the finest juvenile portrayals in motion picture history. The older roles are played by Fredric March, Betty Field, Agnes Moorehead and others. Joan Carroll plays the juvenile par‘ opposite Homeier. Leslie Fenton directed and the musical score was composed by Louis Applebaum, on loan from the National Film Board staff.