Modern Screen (Dec 1948 - Oct 1949)

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(THE 4 COLORINSE GIVES YOUR HAIR MORE COLOR ° Absolutely harmless ° Washes out easily Kv,w, from the famous Nestle Hair Laboratories comes lurium— an amazing new ingredient added to Nestle Colorinse to give your hair more glorious color-beauty, sparkling highlights and silken lustre than ever before. And — Nestle Colorinse with Lurium eliminates tangles — makes hair easier to comb, easier to manage— comes in 10 flattering shades. FREE ! Full size package of Nestle Colorinse. Just write the color of your hair on a postcard and mail it to The Nestle Co., 25 Baker Ave., South Meriden, Conn. 18 Roseonna McCoy: Farley Granger and newcomer Joan Evans portray principal characters in the famed and exciting Hatfield-McCoy feud. ROSEANNA McCOY Cast: Farley Granger, Joan Evans. Charles Bickf ord, Raymond Massey, Richard Basehart. Goldwyn Roseanna McCoy has an unreal quality about it. Its characters seem enchanted. From the moment Johnse Hatfield (Farley Granger) sees — and wants — Roseanna McCoy, at a county fair, you know there will be death and pain and blood, for Johnse's family and Roseanna's family are mortal enemies. Johnse sucks the blood from a hornet's sting in Roseanna's arm, and he tells her that she belongs to him, that he'll be along some night to take her away. Roseanna, who's young, and afraid, wanders close to a campfire where old mountain women sit telling stories, and they speak of the spells a man can lay on a girl, and Roseanna knows that she is lost. Johnse comes for her one dark night, and she goes with him to the Hatfield cabin, but there's no peace for her there. One of the Hatfields (Richard Baseheart) tries to kill her, hate moves all around her. She begs Johnse to let her go home and tell her father the truth about their love. Perhaps she can end the cruel feud which has wasted so many lives. But before Roseanna and Johnse come together again, before love vanquishes hate, there is more bloodshed, more killing. The picture generates an almost unbearable excitement; it has passion, and violence, and a strange kind of dark-of-the-moon feeling which combine to leave you gasping. It's folklore, well-told, and there are more good actors in it than you can shake a stick at. Granger has a wonderful vitality, while Joan Evans, who plays Roseanna, is warm and lovely and touching. IT'S A GREAT FEELING Cast: Dennis Morgan, Doris Day, Jack Carson, Bill Goodwin. Warners This is a gag picture. Warner Brothers let its directors and stars and musicians and producers romp through it, ribbing Hollywood, and they came up with a very gay show. Premise is that Warners is scheduled to make a movie starring Jack Carson and Dennis Mor It's A Great Feeling: Taking playful digs at Hollywood, Jack Carson, Dennis Morgan, and Doris Day get entangled in studio troubles. gan. A serious movie. No director will touch the project. They think Carson would wreck their efforts. Finally Carson says he'll direct himself. Morgan can't see that. He's about to walk out on the deal, when Carson hires a little waitress to pretend she's Mrs. Carson, in a delicate condition. Morgan's heart melts. He signs the contract. Little waitress (Doris Day) expects a part in the picture (that's what Carson promised her) but Carson tries to pay her off with five dollars. She's disillusioned, decides to go home to Wisconsin and marry a man named Jeffrey Bushfinkle. Now Morgan and Carson are in trouble. Morgan's been tricked into doing the picture, but no lady star wants to play opposite him. "A serious picture with Carson?" they all screech. Morgan and Carson go haul Doris back from the railroad station. "We'll make you a star," they announce grandly. They want their producer (Bill Goodwin) to discover Doris, so they stick her behind soda fountains, they make her drive a taxicab, they have her appear like Mary's lamb, everywhere that Goodwin goes. Instead of discovering her, Goodwin thinks he's losing his mind. "Every place I turn, I see a blonde with a sickening smile," he moans. And so it goes, right up to the surprise ending. Doris can make any song she breathes on sound like a hit, and Irving Bacon, as a railroad station information clerk, has the funniest bit in the movie. JOLSON SINGS AGAIN Cast: Larry Parks. Barbara Hale, William Demarest. Ludwig Donath. Columbia Here's the sequel to The Jolson Story, and it takes up right where that movie left off. It's probably no truer to the actual facts of Jolson's life than are most movie biographies of great entertainers, but on every other score it leaves those biographies far behind. There's nothing pretentious about ]olson Sings Again. It's gay and sad, nostalgic and believable. When Ludwig Donath and Tamara Shayne (once again playing Jolson's father and mother) are around, the picture has real