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THE PICK OF THE PICTURES |
a VOICE of the CANADIAN MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY
a a
REVIEWS INFORMATION RATINGS
Vol. 10, No. 22
Experiment Perilous
with Hedy Lamarr, George Brent, Paul Lukas
RKO 91 Mins.
PSYCHOLOGICAL DRAMA PACKS LOTS OF POWER; ATMOSPHERICALLY AN ACHIEVEMENT.
“Experiment Perilous,’ derived by Warren Duff from the Mar
garet Carpenter novel, is a psychological drama of considerable power that has extensive boxoffice potentialities. The picture succeeds rather well in conveying an air of doom. It is unfortunate that the story is not more convincing or more lucidly developed.
Commanding the attention almost unbrokenly, the picture depicts how George Brent, a doctor, prevents Paul Lukas from driving Hedy Lamarr, his wife, insane because of the attention shown her by other men captivated by her charm and beauty. The story, told with a certain staginess, is laid at the turn of the century.
The film is most triumphant in recapturing the atmosphere of the period. The art direction of Albert S. D’Agostino and Jack Okey is in truth an achievement.
CAST: Hedy Lamarr, George Brent, Paul Lukas, Albert Dekker, Carl Esmond, Olive Blakeney, George N. Neise, Margaret Wycherly, Stephanie Bachelor, Mary Servoss, Julia Dean, William Post, J., Billy Ward.
CREDITS: Executive Producer, Robert Fellows; Producer, Warren Duff; Director, Jacques Tourneur; Screenplay by Warren Duff; From the novel by Margaret Carpenter; Director of Photography, Tony Gaudio; Special Effects by Vernon L. Walker; Art Decorators, Darrel Silvera and Claude Carpenter; Sound, John E. Tribby; Music, Roy Webb; Music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; Editor, Ralph Dawson.
DIRECTION, Fine. Fine.
‘Alice,’ Para Film Paramount has closed a deal
for the film rights to “Alice Sit
by the Fire,” one of the late
PHOTOGRAPHY,
Sir James M. Barrie’s most famous plays.
Situation Wanted Experienced Mgr. or Ass’tMer. available for Motion
Picture Theatre. Experienced in Advertising and Personnel work.
Military Exempt. Apply Nat. Selective Service, App. No. 2224.
Nelson, B.C.
REVIEWS FROM FILM DAILY, NEW YORK
Earl Carroll Vanities
with Dennis O’Keefe, Constance Moore Republic 91 Mins.
ROMANTIC MUSICAL IS ENTERTAINMENT PRIMARILY FOR THE YOUNGER GENERATION.
The preposterousness and infantilism of the story reduces “Earl Carroll Vanities’ to the status of entertainment ror tne young and adults who are not discriminating. The inclusion of seven song numbers, the presence of Woody Herman and his orchestra and the air of glamor provided by the subject matter are the strongest selling points of this musical, which has a highly romantic yarn fashioned to the tastes of adolescents. The film’s attempts at comedy are none too successful.
Given a production by Albert J. Cohen that is superior to the material, the film presents Constance Moore as a princess of a mythical kingdom who is in America in search of a loan. Incognito the gal, at the risk of being denied the loan, takes a job as a singer in a show produced by Warl -Carroll (Otto Kruger) staged and written by Dennis O’Keefe, with whom she falls in love. Discovery of her identity complicatesmatters no end, but everything ends well, with the loan in the bag and princess and commoner happily joined.
CAST: Dennis O'Keefe, Constance Moore, Eve Arden, Otto Kruger, Alan Mowbray, Stephanie Bachelor, Pinky Lee, Parkyarkarkus, Leon Belasco, Beverly Loyd, Edward Gargan, Mary Forbes, Tom Dugan, Chester Clute, Jimmy Alexander, Tom London, Wilton Graff, Tommy
Ivo, Liliane and Mario, Woody Herman and orchestra.
CREDITS: Associate Producer, Albert J. Cohen; Director, Joseph Santley; Screenplay, Frank Gill, Jr.; Based on story by Cortland Fitzsimmons; Cameraman, Jack Marta; Musical Director, Walter Scharf; Musical Supervisor, Albert Newman; Film Editor, Richard L. Van Enger; Dance Director, Sammy Lee; Sound, Dick Tyler, Howard Wilson; Art Directors, Russell Kimball, Frank Hotaling; Set Director, Earl Wooden; Special Effects, Howard Lydecker; Songs, Walter Kent, Kim Gannon.
DIRECTION, Okay. PHOTOGRAPHY, Good.
Capitol, North Bay Gets Redecoration
An interior redecoration job was recently completed in the Capitol Theatre, North Bay. Work done included the renewing of all furniture and other furnishings, the hanging of new drapes and the installation of a new powder bar for lady patrons,
The ° Unseen
with Joel McCrea, Gail Russell, Herbert Marshall
Paramount 81 Mins. ONLY FAIR ENTERTAINMENT IS SUPPLIED BY WELL PRODUCED
MELODRAMA WITH CONFUSED
STORY.
Failure to work out its story clearly and coherently serves to make “The Unseen” a disappointing melodrama. The film will leave most persons with a sense of confusion, for which the primary blame goes to those who did the screenplay of the Ethel Lina White novel—Hagar Wilde and Raymond Chandler.
For all its story faults the film succeeds rather well in creating suspense and establishing the proper mood and atmosphere for melodramatic doings. In addition a good production has been accorded the yarn by Associate Producer John Houseman.
The mystery of an empty house adjoining that of Joel McCrea, a widower with two children, drives the interest along. The riddle is solved after a lot of hokus-pocus that throws suspicion on several persons, among them Joel McCrea himself. It seems that Isobel Elsom, in love with Herbert Marshall, a doctor pal of McCrea’s, killed her husband in that house some dozen years earlier and left the medico to dispose of the body. Marshall has to commit a couple of murders to avoid detection.
The film has been acted well enough. Gail Russell plays the McCrea governess to whom her employer becomes attracted.
CAST: Joel McCrea, Gail Russell, Herbert Marshall, Phyllis Brooks, Isobel Elsom, Norman Lloyd, Mikhail Rasumny, Elisabeth Risdon, Tom Tully, Nona Griffith, Richard Lyon, Victoria Horne, Mary Field.
CREDITS: Associate Producer, John Houseman; Director, Lewis Allen; Screenplay, Hagar Wilde, Raymond Chandler; Adaptation, Hagar Wilde, Ken Englund; Based on novel by Ethel Lina White; Cameraman, John F. Scitz; Musical Score, Emst Toch; Editorial Supervisor, Doane Harrison; Art Directors, Hans
Dreier, Earl Hedwick. DIRECTION, Good. PHOTOGRAPHY,
Good.
Increased Trend To Fluorescent
A great increase in the use of fluorescent lighting in exhibition and other branches of the film industry is expected in the postwar period. According to illuminating engineers and architects the new trend in both interior and exterior theatre lighting will call increasingly for fluorescent lamps.
$2.00 Per Annum
Crime Doctor’s Courage
with Warner Baxter Columbia ; 70 Mins.
LATEST OF SERIES IS FAIR-TOMIDDLING MELODRAMA; SCRIPT TOO WORDY.
The newest of the films deriving from Max Marcin’s radio serial isn’t too successful an exercise in the art of melodrama. The screenplay of Eric Taylor leaves a lot to be desired, going overboard on gab and wasting more time than necessary in getting down to business. Those who like lurid touches in melodramatic entertainment and the radio program’s large army of fans will be those primarily appealed to by “The Crime Doctor’s Courage.”
Dr. Ordway, in the person of Warner Baxter, once more is called upon to apply his scientific knowledge to the solution of a murder mystery. Naturally suspicion rests on a number of persons, among them being Stephen Crane, husband of Hillary Brooke, his third wife, the other two having come to violent ends. Death eliminates him as a suspect. The killer turns out to be a studious fellow in love with Miss Brooke.
George Sherman’s direction has failed to get the best out of the players, Baxter included.
Rudolph C. Flothow has produced passably.
CAST: Warner Baxter, Hillary Brooke, Jerome Cowan, Robert Scott, Lloyd Corrigan, Emory Parnell, Stephen Crane, Charles Arnt, Anthony Caruso, Lupita Tovar, Dennis Moore, Jack Carrington, King Kong Kashay.
DIRECTION, Fair. PHOTOGRAPHY, Okay.
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