Judge, 1927-02-26 · page 30 of 36
Judge — February 26, 1927 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1927-02-26. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
~by Sea Sao ama Canal, Francisco gest, fast Wernigbtly i e fice. estships inthe serv! sailings- MAN CHURMLAN oI ae rates. Sos Sent bea al conducted rours ial ” ro West Ask abort daround Ameo Ward in early July- S.S.California, ready forser: vice this Fall, 7 Largest Ameri- can-built liner "LE MARINE COMPANY No. L) Broad: New York City, our offi elsewhere or steamship and railvoad ameacs PANAMA PACIFIC LINE INTERNATIONAL MERCANT! JUDGE, “The World's Wittiest Weekly,” con- tains the best work of the leading artists and humorists. | of You will enjoy every issue of JUDGE, for it will bring you more real humor, more clever pictures, more funny fancies than any other weekly. D Don't delay! Happiness.” G Get in on this special offer of 10 weeks of JUDGE for only $1.00. Never before did you get so much for so little money. sD, Enclose a dollar bill in an envelope with the cou- pon below and mail today. JUDGE— 627 West 43d St., New York. Here is a dollar. Send JUDGE for 10 weeks. Name Address City ess eaane State INSIST UPON KEMP'S BALSAM FOR THAT COUGH! Send in your subscription now. JUDGE will develop your sense of humor and help you enjoy “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Friexp—I suppose you didn’t run across a fellow named Scrimshaw on your travels? Roav Hoc—Dunno, old man—I never stop to ask their names! Judging the Movies (Continued from page 19) ship, smuggles himself aboard and is off for the New World, just as the gendarmerie thunder upon the pier in search of him. From here on the thing goes completely Hollywood. The foully sneer- ing and inhuman captain marks the fair Manon for his own. He has des Grieux cast into the “‘hell-hold” with a choice assortment of manacled mur- derers, who are shown stripped to the waist and gnawing on large bones. Then very consider- ately he puts off his attempt to ravish the heroine to synchronize with the mutiny of the murderers, who, whipped to a frenzy by the tongue lashings of des Grieux, burst their chains and their cage and spread over the vessel in an orgy of blood lust, just in time to save Manon. The final scene is that of des Grieux and Manon alone in a lifeboat, behind them the rising sun, before them the low-lying shore. As he embraces her for positively the last time he murmur: “Yonder, America. For us, freedom—and love ever- lasting !”" I sHouLp mention, I suppose, the Vitaphone features which ac- company this tidbit and together form a program lasting three hours. Most of them are snatches from opera sung by Metropolitan and equivalent stars and worth any man’s attention. The inter- esting experiment is made of pre- senting the singers in huge close- ups and magnifying their voices —Passinc Suow to fit their heroic size. It is dis tinctly successful. TTuene’s no reason, of course, why the picture “New York” should be any better than the pic- ture “London” or the picture “Paris.” It isn’t. Maybe there's something fatal about taking the name of a city in vain. The story of ew York’ is reminiscent of the Irving Berlin- Ellen Mackay romance, though it departs from its model in certain essential particulars. For ex- ample, the young jazz orchestra leader who captures the multi- millionaire’s daughter is none other than the dashing Michael Angelo Cassidy, who dominates a gang on the lower East Side. In the person of Ricardo Cortez he looks less like Irving Berlin than like Mussolini. Furthermore, he gets her father’s consent almost too promptly for the proprieties. A cagier suitor might begin to suspect there was something wrong with the girl. Finally, the other girl, a friend of humbler days who has pursued him with a jealous passion, is shot in his rooms. He has to stand trial; to run the gauntlet of the law as well as of all the reporters and cameras in Christendom. And what do you think happens? In the very nick of time they dis- cover that he didn’t do it. Can you imagine that! The same degree of originality inspires everything about the pic ture, from the acting to the sub- titles. To call it “New York” is like naming a five-cent cigar after Jeritza. comicbooks.com