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THE MAORILAND THEATRE.

"THE PAINTED LADY." Can you (hear the sea in shells? Lovers claim they can. One of the screen's finest pair of lovers hear hot only the sea but a magic far more elemental in shells, and are mesmerised by it. Thrown together by Fate on an island in the pulsing William Fox photoplay, "The Painted Lady," at tlie Shannon Theatre on Saturday, they steal away to the beach, pressing closer together. The message the magic shell murmurs is "Love. . . . Love. . . . Love. .. ." But for the "Painted Lady"- it's bitter sweet. She vaguely dreads the moment when he declares his clean love. She heard the sea and his love, and the false note of her painted past in the shell. But then it wasn't a clam shell, but a gorgeously coloured conch of the South Seas. DEATH DEFYING STUNTS IN "LET'S GO." Richard Talmadge in "Let's Go!" which will be screened on Monday, is a combination of romance and thrills which makes for the highest type of screen entertainment. The story revolves about the ne'er-do-well son of a wealthy business, man who is literally forced into his opportunity for making good. After having detoured around all the policemen he could think of in his speedy roadster, the young man is confronted by one! who had followed him to his father's office. To escape he actually jumps from the third story window of an .office building directly into an automobile below and makes good his escape. From that point on starts the most amazing- series "of death-defying stunts ever shown in a motion picture. Richard Talmadge, the -star, performs every stunt himself without the aid of dummies, ■doiubles. or trick photography of any fund.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19250626.2.5

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Shannon News, 26 June 1925, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
284

THE MAORILAND THEATRE. Shannon News, 26 June 1925, Page 2

THE MAORILAND THEATRE. Shannon News, 26 June 1925, Page 2

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