Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1922)

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BEYOND THE ROCKS— Paramount Written, supervised, and dominated by the personality of Elinor Glyn. A little unreal and hectic as though the continuous presence of the stars was the desired object. But those who like Valentino and Swanson will not be disappointed. A glynish tale of true love, baronial halls, and the treacherous Alps, with Gloria's makeup whiter than the snow. COLD FEET— Educational The best Christie comedy to date. It is a hilarious burlesque of the Curwood Frozen North hokum, and is admirably done throughout. Viora Daniel is excellent as a girl who goes out into the great open spaces in search of romance, and gets it in the form of bogus Northwest Mounted Policemen and trick wolves. Something we believe you're going to enjoy. FASCINATION— Tiffany Mae Murray as a Fifth Avenue flapper with no responsibilities at all makes glorious promises she fails to keep after the first two reels. She goes to Spain, plays around with a toreador, poses for misty closeups, and even does a lilliangish. What might have been good comedy-drama degenerates into Spanish love and hate, made in N. Y. Why does the lovely Mae do it? REPORTED MISSING— Seknick A high dive from the yard arm of a ship, a free-forall fight, Owen Moore at his best and a blackface actor, Tom Wilson, make this a corking comedy. Not to mention a scenically splendid storm at sea. All about a kidnapping and an option that nearly expires, with Owen Moore starring. Titles, by a group of newspaper humorists, are unusual. Story and direction are not. THE GLORIOUS ADVENTURE — J. Stuart Blackton It's one of those "in the days of old when knights were bold" things. For people who have a weakness for kings and sword-play and old inns and faire ladies. This first photoplay in colors is a novelty but hardly a knockout. Lady Diana Manners is the perfect English beauty. She can't act, but then you can't have perfect English beauty, a title, and talent. 64 WHEN ROMANCE RIDES — Hampton'Goldwyn When it does, and on Wildfire, too, the Zane Grey hounds sit forward in their seats. If you're a Z. G. h., you'll get a moderate amount of thrills from this drama of the great west where men are men and any girl can turn jockey and win a horse race at a moment's notice. Claire Adams is the charming heroine who is pursued from crag to crag by two awful villains.