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E PICK OF E PICTURES
REVIEWS INFORMATION RATINGS
Vol. 10, No. 7
The Master Race
with George Coulouris RKO 96 Mins. TIMELY AND VITAL PRODUCTION IS RATED AS AN EXPLOITATION NATURALs
As timely as tomorrow, “The Master Race” is a burning and earnest indictment of the Junker spirit in Germany. After seeing it one understands more clearly why Germany must be cured of the disease of militarism. Hcre indeed is a purposeful film carrying to the world a message of supreme importance. To see it might well be considered a duty on the part of all concerned with the future peace of the world.
Although as a film ‘The Master Race” is inferior to ‘Hitler’s Children,” it is an exploitation natural that financially should fare no less handsomely than the earlier Edward A. Golden production.
Despite the fact the story doesn’t do justice to the sensational quality of the subject matter, it is dramatically arresting and effectively and competently produced by Robert Golden.
The tale deals with an insidious plot to lay the. groundwork for a third world war to preserve the fiction of the master race. The idea is to sow discord among the Allied nations and then strike when the moment is ripe.
The cast makes up in ability for what it lacks in name strength. George Coulouris runs away with the acting honors as the main plotter.
CAST: George Coulouris, Stanley Ridges, Osa Massen, Carl Esmond, Nancy Gates, Morris Carnovsky, Lloyd Bridges, Eric Feldary, Helen Beverly, Gavin Muir, Paul Guilfoyle, Richard Nugent, Louis Donath, Herbert Rudley, Jason Robards, Merrill Roden, Chislaine Porreau.
CREDITS: Producer, Robert Golden; .
Director, Herbert J. Biberman; Screenplay, Herbert J. Biberman, Anne Froelick, Rowland Leigh; Based on story by Herbert J. Biberman; Cameraman, Russell Metty; Art Directors, Albert S. D’Agostino, Jack Okey; Set Decorators, Darrell Silvera, Al Fields; Sound, Francis M. Sarver; Musical Score, Roy Webb; Musical Director, C. Bakaleinikoff; Film Editor, Ernie Leadley.
DIRECTION, Good. PHOTOGRAPHY, Good. ‘
John Meredith Passes
John Meredith, 61, who became doorman at the Capitol Theatre, St. Thomas, Ontario, when it opened its doors 13 years ago, passed away in that city after an illness of a year and a half. He was admired by all who knew him and his passing caused many regrets.
REVIEWS FROM FILM DAILY, NEW YORK
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo
with Van Johnson, Spencer Tracy M-G-M 138 Mins. STORY OF DOOLITTLE RAID 1S EXCITING, MOVING ENTERTAINMENT SURE OF SMASH B. O.
The fame that has accrued to the Doolittle raid on the Japanese homeland makes “Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo” a box office natural beyond any question of a doubt. The production, a giltedge achievement by Producer Sam Zambalist with high-caliber direction by Mervyn LeRoy, is big and sweeping, with touches of the sensational in its almost-documentary stretches.
Packing power and excitement out of the usual, the film tells with unflagging interest the story of the Doolittle air attack. When the picture sticks to the preparations for and the execution of the raid it is a tense, gripping document scarcely equalled on the screen.
The film is built around the part played in the raid by Major Ted W. Lawson, a lieutenant at the time. The role is in the hands of Van Johnson, who dominates the film. The part of Doolittle, a more or less minor one is enacted by Spencer Tracy.
The tale, never losing sight of human values, has a world of romantic embroidery. The relationship between Johnson and his bride, Phyllis Thaxter, is filled with tenderness and sweetness that will have the femmes on the verge of tears.
The film has been drawn out unreasonably. Cutting would give it greater speed and tightness.
Johnson easily gives his best screen performance. Tracy makes the most of every appearance. Miss Thaxter, a newcomer, has much to recommend her. Robert Walker stands out also.
CAST: Van Johnson, Robert Walker, Spencer Tracy, Phyllis Thaxter, Tim Murdock, Scott McKay, Gordon McDonald, Don DeFore, Robert Mitchum, John R. Reilly, Horace McNally, Donald Curtis, Louis Jean Heydt, William “Bill” Phillips, Douglas Cowan, Paul Langton, Leon Ames.
CREDITS: Producer, Sam Zimbalist; Director, Mervyn LeRoy; Screenplay, Dalton Trumbo; Based on book and magazine story by Capt. Ted W. Lawson, Robert Considine; Cameramen, Harold Rosson, Robert Surtees; Musical Score, Herbert Stothart; Recording Director, Douglas Shearer; Art Directors, Cedric Gibbons, Paul Groesse; Set Decorators, Edwin B. Willis, Ralph S. Hurst; Special Effects, A. Amold_ Gillespie, Warren Newcombe, Donald Jahraus; Film Editor, Frank Sullivan.
DIRECTION, Aces. PHOTOGRAPHY, Aces.
One Body Too Many
with Jack Haley, Jean Parker and Bela Lugosi Parz mount 74 Mins. JACK HALEY GOES TO TOWN IN A SWELL COMEDY THRILLER, ABLY DIRECTED.
Jack Haley really goes to town in this comedy thriller. It’s a romp for him and he piles up many laughs. Director Frank McDonald effectively guided the proceedings, while Bill Pine and Bill Thomas functioned as producers. Winston Miller and Maxwell Shane wrote the original story and screenplay.
Jean Parker and Bela Lugosi are co-starred with Haley. Bernard Nedell, Blanche Yurka, Douglas Fowley, Lyle Talbot and Lucien Littlefield are among the important principals.
Haley is an insurance salesman and has an appointment with a wealthy prospect, who is an enthusiastic devotee of astrology. Jack comes to his home and is mistaken for a private investigator, who is to guard the coffin containing the body of the prospect, whose death Is unknown to Haley.
The heirs of the dead man have assembled at his mansion to hear his will read by his attorney, Nedell. Lugosi, the butler, Blanche Yurka, the housekeeper, and William Edmunds, an astrologer, are among the strange figures in the
household. There are some slay-
ings and other complications before the final clinch, with Haley and Jean Parker in each other’s arms.
CAST: Jack Haley, Jean Parker, Bela Lugosi, Bernard Nedell, Blanche Yurka, Douglas Fowley, Dorothy Granger, Lyle Talbot, Lucien Littlefield, Ray Helm, Maxine Fine, William Edmunds.
CREDITS: Producers, Bill Pime and Bill Thomas; Director, Frank McDonald; Authors, Winston Miller and Maxwell Shane; Screenplay, same; Cameraman, Fred Jackman, Jr.; Art Director, F. Paul Sylos; Editor, Howard Smith. ie DIRECTION, Good. PHOTOGRAPHY,
le
Vancouver Pioneers Elect Neville
Cecil S. Neville, was recently elected president of the British Columbia Branch of the Canadian Picture Pioneers.
Morrell is Prexy
George Morrell is the 1945 president of the Toronto Suburban Managers’ Association, an FPCC group. Maurice Doyle is vice president, Allan, Easson treasurer and Jay Smith is secretary.
$2.00 Per Annum
She Gets Her Man
with Joan Davis, William Gargan, Leon Errol
Universal 74 Mins. FAST-PACED COMEDY OFFERS
JOAN DAVIS FANS PLENTY OF OP
PORTUNITY FOR LAUGHS.
The comic spirit of Joan Davis triumphs over the indifferent material at her disposal to make “She Gets Her Man” pretty good fun for the family trade. Intelligence has been booted into the background in the determination to squeeze as much laughter as possible out of the script. Under Erle C. Kenton’s direction the action, which is not above descending to slapstick, is furious and constant.
Miss Davis is enlisted by the editor of a small-town paper to meet the demand of the citizenry for a person of courage and ability to half a murderer who has thrown the community into a panic. The people place faith in her on the strength of her late mother’s fine record as police chief. Aided by Leon Errol, a member of the police force, Miss Davis blunders along in an attempt to find the murderer. Only fool’s luck makes it possible for her to solve the case.
Produced acceptably by Warren Wilson, who did the screen
-play in association with Clyde
Bruckman, the film bolsters its entertainment value through the support accorded Miss Davis by Errol and William Gargan, a reporter who stirs our heroine roe mantically.
CAST: Joan Davis, William Gargan, Leon Errol, Vivian Austin, Russell Hicks, Virginia Sale, Cy Kendall, Paul Stanton, Emmet Vogan, Donald McBride, Milburn Stone, Ian Keith.
CREDITS: Producer, Warren Wilson; Director, Erle C. Kenton; Screenplay, Warren Wilson, Clyde Bruckman; Additional Dialogue, Ray Singer, Dick Chevillat; Cameraman, Jerry Ash; Art Dircctors, John B. Goodman, Robert Clatsworthy; Sound Supervisor, Bernzsrd B. Brown; Set Decorators, Russell Gausman, Leigh Smith; Film Editor, Paul Landres.
DIRECTION, Fair. PHOTOGRAPHY, Okay.
Republic Will Build Million-Dollar 'Road'
Republic will spend a million dollars on Joseph Kane’s “Glory Road,” story of the first Pony Express, Kane is also set as producer and director,
This is Republic’s second million-dollar western. “The Falhulous Texan,” with Bill Elliot, is the and will roll when okay weather reports come in from Texas and Arizona,