Pictures and the Picturegoer (Jan-Dec 1925)

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58 Pictures and PichjreQver JULY ?5>25 Born Rich (Ass First Nat.; July 6). Bert Lytell and Claire Windsor in a Society story about a wealthy young couple, who only discover true happiness when they lose their money. Cullen Landis, Doris Kenyon, Frank Morgan, J. Barney Sherry, Jackie Ott, William Burton, and Maude Turner Gordon support the stars. Director, Will Nigh. Capitally played and mounted comedy drama. Broken Shackles (Phillips; July 2). Thomas H. Swinton. Mildred Ryan, Edward Grace, Henry West, and Luella Carr, in a vivid story of love and regeneration, with some thrilling underwater scenes. Fair entertainment. Curly Top (Fox; July 27). A Thomas Burke story of Limehouse, well played by Shirley Mason, Wallace MacDonald, Warner Clark, Diana Miller, George Kuiva, Ernest Adams, Nora Hayden, and La Verne Lindsay. Director, Maurice Elvey. Fair entertainment. The Coast of Opportunity (Western Import; July 27). A conventional Mexican adventure story of a crooked copper deal and a plucky fight, starring J. Warren Kerrigan, supported by Hershel Mayall, Ruth Langston, Fritzi Brunette, Eddy Hearn, Florence Hollester, Carl Stockdale, and Wm. V. Mong. A Dangerous Flirtation (Stoll; July 6). Evelyn Brent, Edward Earle, Sheldon Lewis, Pierre Gendron, and Clarissa Sclwyn, in the story of a flirt's hasty marriage and tardy repentance. Director, Tod Browning. Good dramatic fare. Dangerous Money (Paramount; July 20). The love story of a girl who inherited a million which rather turned her head. Interesting exteriors and good acting by Bebc Daniels, Tom Moore, William Powell, Dolores Cassinelli, Mary Foy, and Edward O'Connor. Director, Frank Tuttlc. Good melodramatic fare. Dangerous Pastimes (Pathe; July 20). Poor mystery drama with elaborate Orienval settings and a good cast, comprising Lew Cody, Cleo Ridgley, Elinor Fair, Mrs. Irving Cummings, Arthur Hoyt, and Frank Elliott. Director, Jas. W. Home. A Daughter of Love (Stoll; July 20). A screen novelette about the daughter of a servant girl who marries a peer's son. Featuring Violet Hopson and Jameson Thomas, supported by John Stuart, Minna Grey, Gladys Mason, Fred Raynham, Madge Tree, Ena Evans, and Arthur Walcott. Director, Walter West. Fair entertainment. The Dixie Handicap (Jury-MetroGoldivyn; July 6). A racing romance of the Old South ; very human and sympathetic, and well played by Frank Keenan, Claire Windsor, Lloyd Hughes, John Sainpolis, Otis Harlan, Joseph Morrison, Edward Martindel, Ruth King, and Wm. Orlamond. Director, Reginald Barker. Excellent entertainment. A Divorce of Convenience (W. and F.; July 13). Owen Moore in a farcical comedy of divorce and a lovesick swain. Katherine Perry, Nita Naldi, Wanderlee, Geo. A. Lessey. Dan J. Duffy and Chas. Craig support-Director. Dynamite Dan (IV. and F.; July 6). A stunt story about a college boy who became a prize fighter. Kenneth McDonald stars, supported by Diana Allen, Boris Karloff, Frank Rice, Harry Woods, Jack Richardson, Eddie Hains, Carrie D'Aumere, and Emile Gerdes. Good of its kind. Empty Hands (Paramount; July 6). A weak story about a society girl and an out of-doors man stranded in a Northern wilderness, played by Jack Holt, Norma Shearer, Charles Clarey, Ward Crane, Hazel Keener, and Hank Mann. Director. Victor Fleming. The End of the Rope (July 27). Big Boy Williams, Vivian Rich, Florence McKie, and Fern Ferguson, in Western thrill story. Good open-air stuff. Fearbound (Vitagraph; July 27). Good mining drama of the " Tol'able David '' kind, starring Marjorie Daw and Will Nigh, supported by Niles Welch Louise Mackintosh, Ed. F. Roseman, James Bradbury, jun., Warner Richmond, D, MacReynolds, Jean Jarine, and Frank Conlon. Director, Will Nigh. Feet of Clay (Paramount; July 13). Elaborately staged and amusingly titled, this exotic romance will please everybody. Cast includes Vera Reynolds, Rod La Rocque, Ricardo Cortez, Julia Faye, Robert Edeson, Theodore Kosloff, and Victor Varconi. Director, Cecil B. De Mille. Excellent entertainment. Idle Tongues (Ass. First Nat.; July 20). An American small town story of an unjust imprisonment and the suffering it brought upon the hero — Percy Marmont, of course. In support appear Doris Kenyon, Claude Gellingwater, Lucille Ricksen, Malcolm McGregor, David Torrence, Vivia Ogden, Marguerite Clayton, and Ruby Lafayette. Fair entertainment. Leave it to Jerry (Butchers; July 21). A bright romance about a girl who wanted to be a boy. Billie Rhodes stars, assisted by Willie Collier, jun.. Claire McDowell, Kate Lester, Kathleen Kirkham, Jos. W. Girard, and Allan Cavan. Director, Ben Wilson. The Legend of Hollywood (F. B. 0.; July 6). Said to be founded on fact, this story of movieland has an intensely dramatic climax, and is powerfully played by Percy Marmont, Zasu Pitts, Alec Davenport, Dorothy Dorr, and " Cameo." Director, Renard Hoffman. Read the story in this issue. The Lighthouse By the Sea (Gaumont; July 6). Good, quick action melodrama, starring Rin-Tin-Tin, the clever dog, also Louise Fazenda, Willie " Buster " Collier, jun , Matthew Betz, Douglas Gerrard, and Charles Hill Meirles. Director, Mai St. Clair. A Lost Lady (Gaumont; July 20). Irene Rich in an excellent characterstudy of an unsympathetic but fascinating amorcuse. Matt Moore, June Marlowe, John Roche, Victor Polel, George Fawcett, Eva Gordon, and Nanette Valone also appear. Director, Ha--y Beaumont. An interesting movie. Love's Masquerade (W. and F.; July 20). Conway Tearle, Winifred Westover, Florence Billings, Robert Ellis, Danny Hays, Arthur Houseman, and Robert Schable, in a society story of circumstantial evidence. Fair entertainment. Manhattan (Paramount; July 27). Richard Dix as a bored society youth who seeks thrills in the underworld — and finds them and a wife also. Jacqueline Logan, Gregory Kelly, George Seigman. Gunboat Smith, Oscar Figman, Edna May Oliver, and Alice Chopin support. Director, H. Burnside. Good entertainment. The Man Maker (Phillips; July 20). George Arliss as a magnate who disguises himself as a clerk to make a man out of his idle son. Edith Roberts, Taylor Holmes, Ivan Simpson, Ronald Colman, and Little Joseph Donohue also appear. Good entertainment. The Man Who Played Square (Fox; July 2). A good thrilling Westerner, with many original features and plenty of comic relief. Buck Jones, Ben Hendricks, David Kirby, Hank Mann, Wanda Hawley, and William Scott are the play Director, Al Santell. The Price of Pleasure (European; July 6). Virginia Valli and Norman Kerry in a re-filming of The Price of a Good Time, Mildred Harris's first star movie. Kate Lister, George Fawcett, T. Roy Barros. Marie Astaire, and James O.