Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1939)

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• TARZAN FINDS A S0N1-M-G-M UH, boy, another Tarzan. This time the idyllic life of Johnny Weissmuller and Maureen O'Sullivan in the African jungle is complicated by a plane crash in which the sole survivor is a baby boy. The jungle King and his mate raise him as their own, until, five years later, relatives arrive to claim the boy, who is heir to five million pounds and a title, a kidnaping plot is arranged so the fortune can be controlled. Tarzan has taught the child all his "* tricks, as only he can, to keep him. Th^geous underwater swimming seeenough blood and thundeconvincing charac*' Sheffield, is Henr' CHARLIE CHAN IN RENO-20th Century-Fox HOLLYWOOD may some day crumble and rot, but we've a feeling Charlie Chan will just go on solving celluloid mysteries. Sidney Toler has taken over the title role with enthusiasm and the new adventure comes when an Islander drags Chan into a murder mystery thatji»^^^ *>ped up in Reno. There, against the b^"' ored wives and irritated hus ese detective does his fastidd always by the eager but ".en Yung. Ricardo Cortez straight roles, but comedy — is added to the formula ^ddie Collins. The someis tied up with a rich wronged wife. N A L GUIDE TO MOTION PICTURE ^r Kay Francis' md Men Marry" 56 ^~,^ x w uuu goes to the head of the class I I this month. Nothing but straight A's | show up on our private report card as we circle the set. Every studio in town is booming with the biggest collection of important pictures we've seen in many a moon. We find cooking up, for instance, a potpourri of plums like "Golden Boy," "The Rains Came," Frank Capra's new epic, "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," the long-awaited Hedy Lamarr glamorizer, "Lady of the Tropics," and the Charles Boyer-Irene Dunne "Love Affair" follow-upper, "Modern Cinderella." Walter Wanger snaps out of his nap with "Winter Carnival" and Gary Cooper is busy with Sam Goldwyn's "The Real Glory." Even Bing Crosby is hustling out of the house at the crack of dawn for "The Star Maker." Maybe Hollywood meant it when it promised a new deal in entertainment. There's another new deal we notice, too, this month. Mister and Miss Cinderella have come to town. Never before have we noticed as many young unknowns yanked from nowhere to fill the fought-for shoes of choice Hollywood picture parts. Hollywood is taking a chance on new talent — for which the saints be praised, say we! Our first port of call, Columbia, is the gem of the studio ocean this month with Frank Capra's "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" and Rouben Mamoulian's "Golden Boy" companies cranking their cameras. William Holden in the "Golden Boy" title role, is Hollywood's head Cinderella Man.