Film Follies (Jun 1922 - Jan 1924)

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FILM FOLLIES In this super-melodrama, the greatest artistry is not in the choking but in keeping the waxed moustache on. COLD FEET Featuring VIORA DANIEL Directed by AL CHRISTIE Story by WALTER GRAHAM Photographed bv A. NAGY and ALEX PHILLIPS THE CAST The Romantic Young Thing..Viora Daniel The Wronged Lady Patricia Palmer The Half-Breed Villain Henry Murdock The Superintendent Harry Edwards The Pride of the Mounted Billy Bletcher The Wolves ..Ward Caulfield, George French Tom Dempsey and Fred Hueston The Old Brown Bear Harry Archer An Old Trapper Earl Rodney “Cold Feet” Ideal Comedy for Summer Weather Elsewhere in these pages are a few of the flattering reviews which have already been written in the trade and lay press about this unusual Christie Comedy. The producers have been credited with a novelty which is a spontaneous laugh-getter of the first degree of quality. "Cold Feet,” it is said, will warm up any old house with merriment, and at the same time the vistas of snow country will put the patrons in the right frame of mind during the summer months. Christie is the first producer to utilize the locale of the Frozen North for a comedy film, and he pokes good-natured fun at the film melodramas of the Northwoods. As Robt. E. Sherwood says in “Life,” “the fact that the movies have learned to kid themselves furnis'.us definite information that the great reformation is at hand.” What would a tale of the rugged North be worth without a pack of ravenous wolves? These wolves are ferocious because their costumes itched. The end of a perfect day. After all the shenanegans worked by the plotters, a real Royal N. W. Mounted Police hero cops the final love scene. Paye Six