The Moving Picture Weekly (1920-1921)

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16 THE MOVING PICTURE WEEKLY "i4 bsorhing, it Grips "ifi* Fc "Photoplays of foreign lands, particularly those depicting life in the Orient, ^r the interest, . . . and for that reason, if no other, "The Breath of the Gods* at the Astor Theatre would be of more than passing interest. . . . But the picture does not depend upon its Oriental flavor to win friends. It is, in all departments, a work above the average. Rollin Stur geon, the director, must be credited with skillful work, and the story gives opportunity for the acting of an excellent cast. N. Y. Times. "You'll find The Breath Of the Gods' colorful and entertaining, and its settings are of amazing fidelity." N. Y. Globe. --A Veritable Triumph at tiu Carl Caemmle offers THE DRAMA OF A ROMANCE THAT ROCKED A THRONE. From the Novel by SYDNEY McCALL. A GREAT ALL-STAR CAST TSURU AOKI J. BARNEY SHERRY, ARTHUR C AREWE, ETHEL SHANNON. STANHOPE WHEATCROFT. MARION SKINNER