The New Movie Magazine (Jan-Sep 1935)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

NOW the season's NEWEST UNUSUAL PARIS COLORS for old frocks shades never possible before in tinting and dyeing I Send for %m> FREE Silk Samples of the 10 Newest PARIS COLORS and exclusive RIT "Color Recipes" • See how easily you can give old frocks delightful unusual Paris Colors— just like those shown in the smart dress shops. Simply mix colors as directed in Rit Color Recipes (one part of this to two parts of that), and presto! you^have the season's latest stunning shade! FAST COLORS WITHOUT BOILING! Only RIT offers this advantage! RIT is the modern dye — easier and surer — far superior to ordinary "surface dyes" because it contains a patented ingredient that makes the color soak in deeper, set faster and last longer. Sold everywhere. BIT TINTS and DYES Rit is scored convenient afer; easier FREE ift outof the package PARIS COLOR SWATCHES Miss Rit, 1401 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago Please send me FREE Silk samples of Newest Paris Colors and your Booklet D73. Name . . Address City State Paste on a penny post .card if more convenient On-the-Set Reviews {Continued jrom page 59) (and how to cope with them) of temperamental players . . . Milestone is the lad. Spurned by a Parisian night club queen (who really loves him all the time), Carminati goes to the top of Eiffel Tower, determined to end it all. With one foot over the rail, he is surprised to discover Ida Lupino about to pull the same wing-ding, and, in trying to talk each other out of splashing up the boulevard, they get so interested that they forget what they came up there for in the first place. Changing her mind about things, Miss Ellis dashes out to reclaim the love she has nearly shoved overboard, only to find that Tullio and Ida have decided that the two of them can live as cheaply as one. Ida is heartbroken and Mary offers to join the convent with her. But, just in the nick of time, Carminati puts his foot in the door, yanks his beloved Mary into his strong arms and, with Ida realizing that she's loved a poor young poet all the time, the finish is all to the good. For picture WEREWOLF OF purposes, ValLONDON erieHobsonwas • supposed to let UNIVERSAL out a terrified scream at the sight of Henry Hull in his werewolf make-up. And, when Werewolf Hull walked on the set, Miss Hobson did her part all right, turning loose a hairraising scream that completely satisfied Director Stuart Walker. But, when the gal screamed again . . . and again, and kept right on screaming until there was nothing to do but take her to the studio hospital and administer a strong sedative, well . . . that's one on you, Dracula! Hull, a famous floriculturist, treks into the wilds of Thibet for the purpose of securing a strange and rare "wolf flower" to add to his already startling collection. It is a pale moonlit night, and just as he stoops to gather up one of the rare plants, a figure, half man, half wolf, slinks out of the shadows and bites him severely on the arm! Back in London with his treasure, Hull is horrified to discover that . . . comes the full moon, he is transformed into a terrible, wolf-like beast, that gallops around murdering any female that crosses its path! Meeting Warner Oland in one of his lucid moments, Hull recognizes in him the creature that bit him as he attempted to procure the wolf flower! And Oland, likewise afflicted, knows that the wolf flower is the only thing that can break up the horrible spell and make them normal again. Of course, there is a battle for possession of the flower, with Oland carrying it off for himself, while Hull continues to haunt the streets on his murderous quest for human blood. There is a Lon Chaney ending to the picture, with Hull shot down as he attempts to murder his own wife, leaving her to the tender mercies of the man she has loved since childhood. Remember the play, "Mary Jane's Pa," by Edith Ellis? Well, this is it. All dressed up with a new monicker, and going places. Guy Kibbee plays "Pa," an itinerant WANDERLUST WARNERS' • For those sleek effects so much in vogue right now, your hair must be uniformly colorful, soft and pliant, with a subtle lustre. Dull, faded, harsh hair simply will not respond to these new, modish hair dressings. But don't worry about it. Just put ColoRinse in the shampoo wash. Use as much as you want to . . . it's harmless vegetable compound, not a dye or a bleach, and you have 10 lovely shades to choose from. The instant result will delight you, for your hair will glow with renewed youthful color and glamour . . . that "Sheen of Youth" you never want to lose. Also ask for Nestle SuperSet, Nestle Golden Shampoo or Nestle Henna Shampoo. THE NESTLE-LEMUR COMPANY MAKERS OF QUALITY PRODUCTS N EW YORK printer whose itchy feet refuse to let him stay long in any one place. Leaving the old homestead, one fine spring day, Guy takes a run-out powder that practically makes an Enoch Arden out of him! Returning to the fold, years later, he finds his wife, Aline MacMahon, on the wrong side of a political fence and just about ready to be sold down the river unless something can be done to swing the campaign the other way. And how Guy turns the trick and redeems himself should make for a good evening's entertainment. Seated around the dinner table, Aline, her three children and a visiting politician are trying to do justice to the meal that Guy has cooked up. The daughter, Nan Gray, makes a funny face, takes something from her mouth and stares at it in amazement. "Mother!" she exclaims. "There's something in the hamburg!" "What is it, dear?" Aline asks. "It's a scrap of paper . . . with a letter on it ... an 'A'!" "Oh, dear . . ." Aline gasps. "This is terrible! I hope yours is all right, Mr. Brown?" anxiously. "M-mm-m," mumbles the politician, removing something from his mouth. "I did find a few scraps of paper . . ." So, Director William Keighley is satisfied with the take and, why should they do it again, even for us? DeMille is THE CRUSADES at bat again! • With "yesPARAMOIM men" t0 right of him; "yesmen" to left of him, and the blue air filled with astounding and deserved superlatives ! C. B. is a hound for punishment, that we know. And instead of taking a nice long rest after sliding out from under the responsibility of "Cleopatra," he dove, head first, into extravagant preparations for this newest colossal venture. The story, by Harold Lamb, deals with the romance of King Richard, the Lion Hearted, (Henry Wilcoxon) and Berengaria (Loretta Young). Engaged to marry a princess (Katherine DeMille), Richard doesn't like the idea a little bit, and, to get his mind off his unpleasant alliance, he joins up with the Crusades. With his men, he finds himself in the kingdom of Navarre without food. The king of that principality offers relief if Richard will marry his daughter, Berengaria, and, rather than see his men suffer, the lad agrees to the proposition, sight unseen. But, when Loretta joins the crusades, only to be captured by the enemy, love comes to our lion hearted hero, and in getting her back, he all but tears the country apart! While the story is simple, the production itself is a lu-lu. Five hundred harnesses, specially made after the fashion of the period, will be tacked on to the same number of snorting horses. The costumes are elaborate, and the settings are — well, you know our Mr. DeMille. How about a PUBLIC ENEMY little wmpped NUMBER TWO cream, for a • change? M-G-M Charlie But terworth plays a meek little bookkeeper who doesn't know nuthin' and can prove it! To please his gay, ambitious wife, Una Merkel, he clumsily tries to stammer a raise out of the boss, with the result that "Charlie doesn't work there any more!" And them with a brand new automobile which Una has just bought on the strength of his raise. 60 The Neiv Movie Magazine, May, 1935