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Share Your Thoughts . . .
. . . with your fellow fans, with the stars and producers. We may all agree with you, and again we may not. A difference of opinion is everyone's privilege. So write down those random thoughts on the subjects of movies and movie people and send them to Fans' Forum. Monthly awards for the best letters published: $10.00, $5.00, and five $1.00 prizes. Closing date is the 25th of the month.
Please address your letters to Fans' Forum, Screenland, 37 West 57th St., New York 19, New York.
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FIRST PRIZE WINNER $10.00
I am writing this letter mainly because I would like to know others' opinions on the subject I am about to broach.
To get to the point quickly, I think Western pictures are slipping. Not so long ago, one was able to go into a local movie house where a Western was billed, confident of a spectacle that combined the creditability of Emerson Hough and the romancing of Zane Grey with refreshing characters and splendid horses. Now about the best one can do is to go and suffer through an hour filled with warbling dudes in tight breeches and embroidered shirts, chorus-girl cuties in sequin Levis who frolic over the screen in cream-colored station wagons and finally emerge from the sage brush (made of Cellophane straw) dragging the villian, who was really the only one who showed a grain of brain besides the horses, by the mustache. Now really, Hollywood ! This is too much ! Are you going to give our old Hopatongs and their kind the go by, always confining them to cheap productions that don't do the in justice?
Why must the public be allowed to see only the cavorting of glorified cowpokes and cowpokerettes when there is such a multitude of good Western authors to choose from? Surely among the writings of Zane Grey, William McLeod Rain?, Max Brand
and Charles Alden Seltzer there are a few plots and situations quite worthy of the time, effort and money poured each year into these orgies of glittering grandeur. I don't want to cast any reflections upon the actors that are placed in the unfortunate circumstances that merit them these roles. But, please, let's get back to the real old-time hossoperas. I can assure any doubters that there are plenty of people just waiting for a relief from present conditions.
CECIL HAGEN, Houston, Texas.
SECOND PRIZE WINNER $5.00
Many of the motion pictures released lately have been highly publicized and most of these pictures are very good. But due to the great build-ups they have received, many of us movie-goers have felt quite a let-downwhen the pictures are shown. Naturally the most interesting scenes of a picture are used for advertisements, but when we see the entire picture it is often somewhat of a disappointment.
On the other hand, there have been several motion pictures not so highly publicized that have turned out to be very pleasant surprises. When the movie "Laura" was first released, I hadn't heard a great deal about it. I went to the theater, as did many others, expecting an average picture, but it was very pleasing to find it to be such a marvelous one. I am sure that "Laura" didn't suffer from the lack of publicity, for those who saw it were quick to pass on the good news to others.
So how about it, Hollywood? Let's not have movies so over-publicized that we are let down even when the pictures are good.
BERNADINE LODER, Long Beach, Calif.
FIVE PRIZE WINNERS
$1.00 Each
To argue with Bette Davis about her opinions on morals, as described in her article, "This Is What I Believe," in Screenland, is like arguing with a colored person who thinks segregation and race prejudice are all right and that the restricted ones
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