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Page 12
~ $HORT
THROWS
THOSE WHO THINK of 16 mm. exhibitors as _ Itinerants and unimportant better grow up about such things. In Lucknow, Ontario, Basil Poppas, who operates a 16 mm. situation, was made head of the Chamber of Commerce. One of these days exhibitors associations will have to consider allowing membership to owners of 16 mm. theatres. These are just as important to the communities they serve as the 35 mm. are in theirs.
PULITZER PRIZE for music connected with a motion picture was awarded to Virgil Thomson for his Louisiana Story score. This was the first time film music was recognized as worthy of inclusion in the plan.
LATEST DUAL hookup are the Casino and Garrick, Halifax, Odeon houses. Odeon houses in Halifax and Vancouver. will jointly premiere Floodtide, a film with a shipbuilding background.
IN CONNECTION with the showing of Monogram’s The Big Fight Sam Hebscher, manager of the Savoy, Hamilton, arranged a series of boxing bouts on the stage. They attracted much attention, for the town’s top fighters appeared.
NORTHERN ELECTRIC is offering a microphone weighing less than an ounce and no bigger than a stack of six dimes. And guarantees tonal fidelity, pickup sensitivity and full dynamic range.
Fox Buys Article
Man on the Ledge, a graphic suspense story based on a recent magazine article by Joel Sayre, has been purchased by 20th Century-Fox. Sol Siegel will produce the film which will probably star Richard Widmark.
Cameraman Assig'd
Sid Hickox, ASC, will handle the camera assignment on Warners’ White Heat, starring James Cagney and Virginia Mayo.
"Gun Crazy’ Locales Set By King Bros.
King Bros. has concluded arrangements to use the Security First National Bank in Montrose and the California Bank in Reseda for holdup sequences in their forthcoming United Artists production, Gun Crazy. Peggy Cummins and John Dall will report for both locations.
Canadian FILM WEEKLY
re ECNONS
Shifting the Blame (From the Waterloo Record)
A motion picture industry spokesman says that movies have been made the goat of juvenile delinquency studies. He seems to have a point there. More and more youngsters in trouble seem to give as their excuse, “I got the idea from the movies’”—or maybe “from the comics.”
Superticially that may be so in some cases. In others it may be an alibi picked up from the very studies that the movie man mentioned. But most juvenile crime is not caused by either movies or comics. If it were, there would be many more youthful miscreants. The real causes are such things as broken homes, unhappy home life, poverty and bad environment. Some movies and comic books could stand an elevation of taste, but they aren't the prime villains.
News Notes JENKINS, VCR., WINS EMP-U PRIZE
Winner. of the $150 prize for the best campaign in connection with the U-I film, Man-Eater of Kumaon, is Al Jenkins of the Plaza, Vancouver. Empire-Universal, which released the picture in Canada, provided three prizes.
Second prize of $65 went to Gordon Reambeault of the Odeon, Haney, BC, while Leno Turoldo of the Capitol, Brandon, Manitoba, took third prize of $35.
The judges were impressed with a slide-scene stunt worked out by Dave Rosemond, Garrick, Winnipeg. The slides, showing 16 scenes from the film, were exhibited in a store window.
APPEAL ST. JOHN NO-SMOKING RULE
The decision of Judge J. A. Barry of the County Court, Saint John, NB, in which he upheld the ruling of Provincial Fire Marshall H. M. Armstrong banning smoking in the Paramount Theatre, will be appealed by Famous Players.
The right to appeal to the Supreme Court of New Brunswick has been granted Famous Players. There is wide interest in the case by exhibitors, insurance men, etc. New Brunswick is the only province in which the fire marshall has the power to prohibit smoking.
NATIONAL COMMITTEE MEETS IN FALL?
The National Committee of the Motion Picture Exhibitors Association of Canada will probably meet after the federal election, which will take place on June 27th, it was suggested by John J. Fitzgibbons, its chairman. ;
The same communication dealt with impartial ways of allowing the political parties to make use of the newsreels for the introduction of candidates who might become the Prime Minister.
Use of the screen has been requested by the parties.
UJA FILM GROUP, TORONTO, HOLDS RALLY
Film Group of the United Jewish Appeal of Toronto got away to a good start for the record-seeking campaign of this year. Haskell Masters presided at a dinner in the Recreation Room of Columbia Pictures and those present were addressed by Mrs. Barbar Lawrence, noted community and civic leader.
The Toronto Film Group committee is comprised of Jule Allen, Lawrence IL. Bearg, Garfield Cass, Benjamin Freedman, Harry S. Mandell, Haskell M, Masters, Garson Soloway and Nat A. Taylor.
May 18, 1949
‘Home Of Brave
Standout Drama
Having made Hollywood history in three respects, Home of the Brave, Screen Plays’ film adaptation of Arthur Laurents’ stirring Broadway hit, was delivered to United Artists for release recently.
Home of the Brave is the first Hollywood film to probe antiNegro bitterness in the USA.
Home of the Brave is the first major film production to go from start to release in less than two months.
Home of the Brave is the first film in Hollywood to be planned, written, cast and produced in secrecy.
Producer Stanley Kramer, in Hollywood, swore 600 people to secrecy, a Herculean feat in a town as gossip-minded as Hollywood. Kramer explained that he had successfully rehearsed and produced a completed film in six weeks’ time without a word having leaked through to the outside members of the industry.
Just to add to the complications of the production, Kramer was also deeply involved in preparing for release of his already acclaimed hit film, Champion, starring Kirk Douglas.
When the script was complete Kramer personally approached actors, by-passing their agents, to assure secrecy. He asked for Pledges of secrecy from every one of the technicians involved in the making of the picture, including over four hundred of them who were employed at the film laboratory where film was processed.
‘Tt was our intention,’ the producer stated, “to make an important entertainment feature in its completed form without the usual attendant publicity, so that we would be free of pressures, suggestions and advice of those not connected ‘with its making. And we felt it unnecessary to exploit the fact that we were making a picture of complete reality.”
Added To Schedule
Kingpin, an original wunderworld story, has been put on Paramount’s production schedule. Jales Schermer will produce and Charles Marquis Warren has been assigned to the script.
Lead In "Ambush’ Robert Taylor will have the
lead role of Kinsman in MGM’s
Ambush, a large-scale western.
Fox Buys "Big Gun"
The Big Gun, a story by Bill” Bowers and Bill Fellows has been bought by 20th Century-Fox and it will be produced by Nunnally Johnson, who would like to get Gary Cooper for the lead.