Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1935)

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PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE FOR JUNE. 1935 IIoIIywoo Joins th i net H ad Man k ^■eave it to Warner ros. to make the first big ] cture of America's greati ;t battle in the war on crime! he producers of "The Public nemy" have trained their imeras on the men who trained leir guns on the craftiest killers of lis gang-ridden day and age. hey've brought the G-MEN, mighty manunters of the Department of Justice, out of the ladows of secrecy into the brilliant glare of the icture screen. i esterday's screaming headlines are a feeble whisper compared to the sensational revelations i this shot-by-shot dramatization of gangland's Vaterloo — the last stand of the underworld! t's all here! . . . every graphic detail of how the eadly trap was set — and sprung — on the Mad )og of the Mobs, and of how the Big Shot no lil could hold kept his rendezvous with death! G-Men" is easily the stand-out for this month's ighest honors. Our advice is to see it yourself efore your friends begin to rave about it! Public Enemy No. 1 in the never to be forgotten Warner Bros, thriller, "The Public Enemy." he's on Uncle Sam's side, staging his own private war with the public enemies of 1935! JIMMY C A GNEY revels in his return to the scenes of his greatest triumphs!. . . And Ann Dvorak, Margaret Lindsay and Robert Armstrong score heavily in a big cast, superbly directed by William Keighley for First National Pictures.