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October 10, 1925
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
JOHN FORD — mention his name and you think of "The Iron Horse," one of the greatest pictures of all time. He has also pre duced "Lightnin' 11 and "Thank You11 — John Golden plays — "Kentucky Pride11 and "The Fighting Heart.11
REGINALD BARKER, master director of outdoor pictures, has produced a screen triumph for Fox, based on James Oliver Curwood's "When the Door Opened.11 Now he's preparing to film "The Johnstown Flood,1' a dynamic American epic.
JOHN GRIFFITH WRAY has made A. E. W. Mason's novel, "The Winding Stair," into a photoplay that breathes the romance of Morocco and the dash of the French Foreign Legion. It strengthens Wray's well earned reputation for pre ducing artistic box office successes.
J. G. BLYSTONE has added to the pleasure of millions of Tom Mix fans with "The Lucky Horse shoe," which followed the Bly stone'Mix production, "Dick Turpin." Now they are filming a popular Max Brand novel, "The Best Bad Man."
VICTOR SCHERTZINGER has made "Thunder Mountain," based on "Howdy Folks," a real drama of love in the hills of hate. "The Wheel" has all the punch of the stage play. Both are Golden sue cesses, with proved audience appeal.
FRANK BORZAGE has done some of the best work of his distinguished career in filming "Lazy bones," Owen Davis' gripping stage drama. Borzage will also direct "Wages for Wives" and "The First Year," John Golden plays. All three have proved their box office pull.
ROWLAND V. LEE has made "Havoc" into a powerful film. In "As No Man Has Loved" he has caught the adventure and romance of Hale's story, "The Man With' out a Country." He packed all the thrills of Conrad's "Nostromo" into "The Silver Treasure," a colorful South American romance.
HARRY MILLARDE has made the screen version of Channing Pollock's play, "The Fool," with the same intelligent sympathy that he put into world-renowned "Over the Hill," one of the greatest money-makers the screen has known.
EMMETT FLYNN'S name recalls "The Connecticut Yankee." Now he's made another masterpiece, "East Lynne." It's better than the original melodrama, which has always drawn patronage for three generations. The picture will pack them in.
HENRY OTTO is celebrated for his skill in bringing fantasy to the screen. In "The Ancient Mariner" he gives his imagination free play, and it promises to beat his former greatest achievements.
Fox Film Corporation,
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