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Photoplay Magazine — Advertising Section
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Brief Reviews of Current Pictures
[ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 14 1
HEARTS OF MEN— Anchor.— And producers ain't got no heart. (Ocl.)
HEART TO HEART— First National.— Agreeable and original comedy of small town life. You'll like it. {September.)
HEART TROUBLE— First National.— Harry Langdon writes his own finish in pictures. (Sepl.)
-Carnival life film that has
HEY, RUBE— FBC
thereal stuff. {Dec.)
HIS LAST HAUL— FBO.-Just a tear jerker. (Dec.)
HIS PRIVATE LIFE— Paramount.— One of those French farces that Is full of doors and bores. However, it has Adolphe Menjou. {Dec.)
HIS RISE TO FAME— Excellent.— Prize ring stuff with night club trimmings. {September.)
HOLLYWOOD BOUJMD — Warners. — Talkie farce that sounds as though it had been written by someone who never had been nearer Holly\vood than Parsons, Kans. {November.)
HOMESICK— Fox.— Sammy Cohen as a New York tourist in California. Fairly funny. {Dec.)
*HOME TOWNERS, THE— Warners.— Smoothest talkie so far. Good lines, by George M. Cohan, and a fine performance by Doris Kenyon. {Dec.)
HOT NEWS— Paramount.— Bebe Daniels hunts for thrills in the news reel game. And finds 'em. {September.)
HOUND OF SILVER CREEK, THE— Universal. — Dynamite, the new dog star, blasts an inferior story to success. {August.)
I FORBID — Fan-Maid Pictures. — An over-ripe Kosher film of breaking hearts. {November.)
INSPIRATION— Excellent.— Too little of the title r61e. {Dec.)
♦INTERFERENCE — Paramount.— Drama and suspense in a Grade A murder story. Well acted and well spoken — yes, it's a talkie. {Dec.)
INTO NO MAN'S LAND— Excellent.— An unusually dull war picture. {Dec.)
JUST MARRIED — Paramount. — Honeymoon farce on a transatlantic liner. Lots of laughs. {September.)
KID'S CLEVER, THE— Universal.But the film isn't. {November.)
KING COWBOY— FBO.— Please, Mr. Mix, don't do anything like this againl (Jan.)
KING OF THE RODEO— Univcrsal.—Hoot Gibson's best contribution to Art in a long time. {Jan.)
*KIT CARSON— Paramount.— Fred Thomson in an above par western. {Ocl.)
LADIES OF THE MOB — Paramount. — Clara Bow becomes a gunman's "moll" and handles a dramatic story skillfully. {September.)
LADIES OF THE NIGHT CLUB— TiffanyStalil. — A clown and a millionaire are rivals for the affections of a cabaret girl. Synthetic heart interest. {August.)
LEGEND OF GOSTA BERLING, THE—
Swedish Biograph. — European film with Greta Garbo. proving that Hollywood changed an ugly duckling into a swan. (Jan.)
LIGHTNING SPEED— FBO.— Adventures of a newspaper reporter — as the movies see 'em. (Nov.)
LIGHTS OF NEW YORK — Warner-Vi tap hone. — First all-talkie feature and, naturallv. pretty crude. Squawking night clubs and audible murders. (September.)
*LILAC TIME— First National.— Thrilling and romantic war drama with enough sentiment to lift it above the run of war plays. {August.)
LINGERIE— Tiff a ny-Stahl.— Alice White and Malcolm McGregor in a war romance that vou'U like. (Oct.)
LION AND THE MOUSE— WarnerVitaphone.— Partly dialogue with some effective performances. But the story belongs to a past decade. (September.)
LITTLE WILDCAT, THE— Warners —Nothing to shoot up the'blood pressure. (November.)
LITTLE WILD GIRL, THE— Hercules —Lil a Lee gets mixed up in a lot of old-fashioned hokum. {September.)
LITTLE YELLOW HOUSE, THE— FBO— An awful fuss about nothing at all. (August.)
LOST IN THE ARCTIC— Fox —Interesting and worthwhile story of Arctic Exploration. (Oct.)
LOVE OVER NIGHT— Pathe.— Mystery stuff eased over with some good comedy. (September.)
MADELON— Universal. — A talkie — so bad that it should be a museum piece. (November.)
MAGNIFICENT FLIRT, THE— Paramount.— Mother and daughter in a mix-up of romances. Suave direction and the fascinating work of Florence Vidor put this picture across. (August.)
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Director Richard Wallace is in a terrible jam. When the talkies came he threw away his megaphone and now his technicians are all locked up in a glass show case and can't hear a word he's saying. This is the filming of a scene for "The Shopworn Angel," new Paramount talking picture, and the leggy young lady getting a good horse laugh on poor Richard is Nancy Carroll, the leading woman
Every advertisement In PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE 1b EUaranteed.