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A ao ae
SHIPBOARD movies will be shown by the CPR on its Vancouver-Victoria boats during the winter schedule. Move is to popularize ship travel as against that by airline.
FRITZ LIEBER, famed Shakespearean actor and film player, died recently in Los Angeles from a heart attack at the age of 67. He had just completed a role in MGM’s Devil’s Doorway, his first appearance in motion pictures taking place in 1917. A member at different times of the theatrical companies of Sir Philip Ben Greet, Robert Mantell and David Warfield, he was for many years impresario of his own touring Shakespearean company.
SHOOTING has started on Selkirk Productions’ first film, Forbidden Journey. Story deals with the flight of a refugee to Canada from behind the Iron Curtain and is being produced in the Renaissance Studios in Montreal from a script by Richard Jarvis and Cecil Maiden.
SELECTION of MGM’s That Forsythe Woman for; showing at the annual Command Performance by the executive committee of the Cinema Trade Benevolent Fund has been approved by King George. Film is taken from John Galsworthy’s novel, “The Forsythe Saga” (book one), and has been set for a NY Radio City Music Hall date in November.
SCIENTIFIC films will be shown by Toronto’s new Science Film Group, which is affiliated with the Scientific Division of the National Film Society. Programs, dealing with a variety of subjects in the field of physics, medicine, etc., will be shown on the second Thursday of each month at the University of Toronto. ;
JULES LEVEY, after two years of inactivity, is preparing a six-picture independent program to get under way by late November. Producer is negotiating for a New York stage play and an outdoor action story.
WEEKLY movie shows on Tuesday at 6.30 p.m. are being presented specially for children at the Esquimault, BC, Community Centre by Harold Kerr. Cartoons, comedies, travelogues and musicals make up the program and are proving popular with the youngsters.
SUNDAY sports will be the big issue at the next municipal elections on January 2 in Toronto. Unorganized sport in parks is permitted but organized sport such as professional baseball, hockey, etc. is only allowed six days a week. Surprising opposition to the plan is being voiced by the Globe & Mail and the Telegram, both of which have indicated that they are in favor of “quiet Sundays.’”’ Windsor Council, following Toronto’s lead, is also asking a plebiscite on the question.
RELIGIOUS and Educational Visual Aids Society has purchased the feature-length film, I Am With You, for use in local churches. Filmed in Southern Rhodesia, the picture has English dialogue and deals with a young missionary who has his faith in God shaken, but ultimately has it restored to him.
MACHINE designed to splice 35 and 16 mm. safety film and magnetic tape, said to be the first to be developed of its kind in the field, is being manufactured in New York. Maker says it will achieve the only splice to hold up even under the “hot developing process” used for highspeed reproduction of TV, newsreel and Ultrafax film and completely eliminates need for clips or staples. He claims it is simple to operate and splicing can be accomplished in the darkroom.
SERVICING of the automobiles of drive-in ‘patrons while they watch the show is the latest wrinkle to worry operators of standard-type theatres. Attendants wheel up portable storage carts and without noise or visual interruption fill the gasoline tank and add or even change the oil. Servicing company pays the drive-in operator a premium of one cent on a gallon of gasoline and five cents on each quart of oil sold. Some 2,000 drive-ins in the USA are installing the service and will charge the items bought if the patron wishes.
WALLETS, purses and gloves are the most numerous articles left in theatres by patrons. Umbrellas, fountain pens, scarves, hats, jewelry, cigarette cases and lighters are also forgotten in quantity. But such odd items as shoes and wigs are picked up occasionally. In all instances the theatre attempts to return the items and if unsuccessful donates it to charity after a certain period of time.
Canadian FILM WEEKLY
— Short Throws —
October 26, 1949
ONE EDITOR PUBLISHED THIS STILL... AND WENT TO JAIL
While OBSESSION was being shot on location in Mayfair, Haigh, the acid-bath murderer, was pulling off the last of his crimes nearby. By a freak, film and facts were so much alike that not only the film but all publicity on it was banned until the death sentence had been passed on the murderer. In the issue of the London Mirror, commenting on the case, which resulted in the editor going to jail for contempt of court, he ran this still from OBSESSION, showing Robert Newton as a murder suspect. When released,
OBSESSION was sensational at the boxoffice.
J. ARTHUR RANK presents OBSESSION, (Thriller) starring Robert Newton and Sally Gray with Paul Brown and Naunton Wayne. Produced by N, A. Bronsten. _ Directed by Edward Dmytryk, Based on the novel, “A Man
About A Dog.”