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you are apt to feel that you just can't wait to see the good old unsentimental newsreel.
THE RAGE OF PARIS (Universal)
| Cute as a kitten is Danielle Darrieux in the gay little comedy designed for the vacation trade. She rolls her eyes, she scrambles her English ever so slightly, she over-acts with a delicate precise charm, and audiences come out of theaters gasping that Universal has a discovery.
It really isn't fair to tell the plot of the story, because the plot is an old friend. But the dialogue is new and the cast is fine, so all you need to know is that Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. plays the leading male role as a young business executive of vast wealth; that Mischa Auer and Helen Broderick persuade the little French girl that she must marry for money; that she starts to pursue a willing millionaire played by Louis Hay ward; that everyone has a lot of fun with the mixed up romances.
TROPIC HOLIDAY (Paramount)
| Just the idea of Bob Burns dressed up in a bull fighter's costume is funny. It gets funnier when he really fights a bull. So does Martha Raye. There is a romance between Ray Milland and Dorothy Lamour in a picturesque Mexican setting, some songs, some dances, and, for good measure, Binnie Barnes burlesquing a movie queen.
JOSETTE (Twentieth Century-Fox)
| Miss LeBlanc (Simone Simon) was just the tobacconist's daughter, but she wanted to go on the stage. So she became the wardrobe mistress in a New Orleans night-club. Her big chance came when Josette, (Tala Birell), new star of the floor show, hooked old man Brissard (William Collier, Sr.) and fled with him to New York just before her first show opened.
In the meantime, the two Brissard boys (Robert Young and Don Ameche) were waiting out front and congratulating themselves at having hustled papa out of town so that they could buy off the scheming Josette behind his back.
Bert Lahr as owner of the night club, Joan Davis as the companion of the enterprising Josette, and Paul Hurst as a wonderfully swacko patron add greatly to the comic confusion which follows Miss LeBlanc's masquerade as the missing Josette.
Simone Simon gives generously of the familiar mannerisms which have endeared her to quite a number of people.
WHEN WERE YOU BORN? (Warners)
■ Anna May Wong, looking more exotic than ever, helps the police solve a mystery murder by the aid of astrology, and helps audiences have a lot of laughs by some pointed remarks about characteristics of people born under different signs of the zodiac. The picture is a novelty in that, at some time or another, every person in the audience can take part of the dialogue personally.
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