MAJESTIC THEATRE
TO-NIGHT. In "The Man at Six," filmgoers have . a British mystery film that is worth seeing, for here is a picture having all the elements tbat good examples of its type should have. The stpry is an effective, puzzling one, but if told -here would spoil your enjoyment of the picture. Suffice it" to say that the "man at six" as one of a group of people brought together in a house to which the police have been mySteriously summoned. A body is f oiund by an amateur detective, and several people are implicated in the murder, the mystery of which is finally solved by the aetual criminal. The mystery is baffling, and so well is the story unfolded, under the direetion of Harry Hughes, that you are • kept guessing all the while the action is taking plcae. All the players have been well cast and Anne Grey is charming and mystifying as the girl in the case who is more than she seems. Lester Matthews is a debonair amateur detective and Kenneth Kove contributes some ,excellent comedy touches.
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 578, 8 July 1933, Page 3
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181MAJESTIC THEATRE Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 578, 8 July 1933, Page 3
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