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THE PICK OF THE PICTURES
Vol. 18, No. 6
Sweet Genevieve
with Jean Porter, Jimmy Lydon and Al Donahue and his Orchestra
Columbia 70 Mins.
HIGH SCHOOL ROMANCE WITH BASKETBALL SETTING IS PEPPY OFFERING.
Here is a peppy offering, which has the pert, pleasing Jean Porter and the likeable, capable Jimmy Lydon as cofeatured players. Also featured are Al Donahue and his or-chestra.
Arthur Dreifuss furnished good direction, while Sam Katzman functioned as producer. Dreifuss also collaborated with Jameson Brewer on the screenplay. Ira H. Morgan handled the photography.
Gloria Marlen does good work as the femme heavy, while the veteran comedian, Lucien Littlefield, Ralph Hodges, Tom Batten, Kirk Allen, Mary Newton, Noel Cravat, Bryant Washburn, Leslie Turner and Norma Jean Bush are among the principals.
When Gloria Marlen, star of the Franklin High’s girls’ basketball team, is declared ineligible because of her poor grades, things look dark for Franklin, which must win the big game to earn a $50,000 bequest. Jean Porter replaces Gloria not only on the team, but in the affections of Jimmy Lydon.
Gloria does not give up easily and she gets Jean bounced from the big contest. However, Jean -is cleared just in time to get into the game and lead her team to victory.
“Five Of The Best’ and “Mama, Get Away From That Juke Box,” by Allan Roberts and Doris Fisher, fit nicely into the proceedings.
CAST: Jean ‘Porter, Jimmy Lydon, Al Donahue and his orchestra, Gloria Marlen, Ralph Hodges, Lucien Littlefield, Tom
Batten, Kirk Allen, Mary Newton, Virginia Belmont.
CREDITS: A Sam Katzman Production; Director, Arthur Dreifuss; Screenplay, Jameson Brewer, Arthur Dreifuss; Cameraman, Ira H. Morgan.
DIRECTION, Good. PHOTOGRAPHY,
Virginia Field Cast Virginia Field will star in Warners’ “John Loves Mary.”
Leads For ‘Whistler’
Michael Duane and Lenore Aubert were signed recently by Columbia for the romantic leads in “The Return of the Whistler.” D. Ross Lederman will direct and Rudolph Flothow will produce.
REVIEWS FROM FILM DAILY, NEW YORK
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
with Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston, Tim Holt, Bruce Bennett
Wamers 126 Mins. FULL BLOWN ADVENTURE YARN; HE-MAN STUFF; SHOULD PILE UP
A LOT OF COIN FOR THE EXHIBI:
TOR.
In the beginning Bogart is on the bum in Tampico, cadging pesos from local Americans. He meets Tim Holt on a park bench. Later they go to work for Barton MacLane at a construction camp. After weeks of toil MacLane makes off with their wages. Bogart, previously, bought a piece of lottery ticket. Later it proves a winner. Then the pair encounter MacLane in a saloon and give him a fistie going cver that is one of the most brutal things ever shown. The two get their moola, meet up with Walter Huston, a babbling philosophical prospector down to his uppers. Locale is a flophouse. Pooling their money the three make up an expedition and head for the Sierra Madre Range.
In short order the three have caches of gold in raw form stowed about their primitive camp. There is a bandit atteck. Bruce Bennett, a wandering Texan, aids them in driving the criminais off. Bennett is killed. At length the vein is exhausted, the crew head back. En route a series of stark adventures beset their paths. Bogart goes berserk. Huston is detained by natives.
Kept in line by Holt, Bogart slips the noose and gets the drop on his captor, also a gun. He wounds Holt, leaves him for dead. Bogart makes off with mule loads of gold. Same bandits as before waylay him and he gets his due — in the neck with a machete. Later Holt and Huston come up hot on the trail. The ignorant bandits have slashed open and discarded the gold bags, left them exposed to the weather. A windstorm comes up, the treasure is wafted back to the mountains leaving Holt and Huston in a high state of distracted, maniacal glee at their meeting wtih fate.
CAST: Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston, .Tim Holt, Bruce Bennett, Barton MacLane, Alfonso Bedoya, iA. Soto Rangel, Manuel Donde,
CREDITS: Producer, Henry Blanke; Director, John Huston; Screenplay, John Huston; Based on a novel by B. Traven; Photography, Ted McCord.
DIRECTION, Fine. PHOTOGRAPHY, Excellent,
"MGM
Good News
with June Allyson, Peter Lawford, Joan McCracken
95 Mins.
COLLEGE CAMPUS MUSICAL COMEDY IS NOSTALGIC SOUVENIR OF ANOTHER DAY THAT SHOULD MOUNT INTO KING-SIZE BOXOFFICE FIGURES.
The DeSylva, Brown, Henderson, Mandel, Schwab musical comedy of college life, 1927 vintage, first seen on film in 1930, in this new version gets an infusion of Technicolor and a reviving transfusion of slick young players to make it a pleasant diversion.
Aiding in the process of restoration, June Allyson, Peter Lawford and Patricia Marshall, suitably render the main parts but it is Joan McCracken who gives most verve and refreshing impetus to the routine of boy meets giri, etc. She’s a dancer, and paired with Ray McDonald, has a number of the best moments in the show.
Atmosphere pervading the yarn gives indication that life at Tait is just one big house party with the boys and girls playing house. Campus Romeo Peter Lawford meets up with and is ficored by Patricia Marshall. She 5 to spouting French all ver the place. is cap set for conguest, Lawford is rebuffed at the outset of his amorous campaign.
He enlists the aid of June Allyson. She coaches him in French, he develops an affection for her. When she learns his purpose, she in turn brushes him off and he flunks an exam, Meanwhile Miss Marshall, who has been cultivating the scion of dairy millions, learns that Lawford is a big name in pickles, promptly switches. Lawford crams French
with Miss Allyson’s aid who does
it only for dear old Tait. He louses up the ensuing exam. Via Miss Allyson’s good graces, he is given a passing grade, so play: football. The game is a confusion. Lawford’s heart is not in it. Miss Allyson pulls the final switch that causes Lawford to lead his team to the well known victory.
CAST: June Allyson, Peter Lawford,
Patricia Marshall, Joan McCracken, Ray McDonald, Mel Torme, Robert Strickland.
CREDITS: Producer, Arthur Freed; Director, Charles Walters; Associate producer, Roger Edens; Screenplay, Betty Comden, Adolph Green; Based on the musical comedy by DeSylva, Brown, Henderson, Mandel, Schwab.
DIRECTION, Suitable. PHOTOGRAPHY, Good,
REVIEWS INFORMATION RATINGS
$2.00 Per Annum
Nicholas Nickleby
with Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Derek Bond, Bernard Miles
Eagle-Lion 95 Mins.
FINE DICKENS TRANSLATION: THE BRITISH DO THIS SORT OF THING UP VERY WELL.
Yet again the screen has proved the ideal medium for translating the literary work of Charles Dickens into a readily understandable, pleasant form. From J. Arthur Rank’s Baling Studios another fine contribution to the collection has come here to capture audience esteem, critical attention.
The players within the story give unrestrainedly in the manner and form of dramatics prevalent in the story’s period setting. It is a well chosen cast. Sir Cedric Hardwicke is the important name insofar as American audiences are concerned.
Spiritedly the scenario handles the story of “Nicholas Nickleby’s” conflict with the world of his uncle, “Ralph.” Derek Bond plays the title role. Sir Cedric is the villain in the piece who constantly threatens Bond and his mother and sister with the direst proceedings. Hardwicke is a selfish old boy who pales at the thought of extending any semblance of human decency to his bereaved relatives. Bond takes a post in a boys’ school in Yorkshire.
It is a sordid hole where unfortunate youngsters are starved, beaten. Bond rebels against the mistreatment, beats up the headmaster. He runs away with “Smike.” They join a theatrical troupe for a while, until Bond is called to London to aid his sister. Hardwicke has been using her for a business lure and is planning a nefarious future for the girl. Bond thwarts him, secures employment. “Smike’’ joins him and the future looks good. The way to happy fulfillment still has a few obstacles. Bond overcomes them. At about this time Hardwicke’s run of luck is exhausted and after a few missteps he finds himself in the hands of the law which is where he should have been in the first place.
CAST: Derek Bond, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Mary Merrall, Sally Ann Howes,
Bernard Miles, Athene Seyler, Alfred Drayton, Dame Sybil Thorndike.
CREDITS: Producer, Michael Balcon;
Director, Cavalcanti; Screenplay, John Dighton. DIRECTION, Fine. PHOTOGRAPHY,
Okay.