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MAORILAND THEATRE.

"I WAJNT. MY MIAN..'' "I Want My Man," As a fine dramatic story featuring Mihon Sills and Doris henyon. There are poignance ana strength in the situation of. the woman who trees her husiband to test her claim on. his affection on fair terms with the wiottman who has waited loiMuni. And itiiere.is, the strength of admonition in ■Silie" return amer eight years of war blindness in prance see King a cure to hnd his fine old family caught up in the jazz delirium that swept the world at the end oi the last'war, .'The piotpre is an adaptation of jStruthers Hurt's recent novel, "The interpreter's House" and the unusual theme and many tensely dramatic inouneiits make of it an entertainment of the highest class, wiuie 'me perlo.nnauees of the two principals and their fine supporting- cast, have even further enhanced the plot, making ot it a v&r.y real, very huimain and appealing little story. It will he •screened on Wednesday.

"FLOWING QOTD." Rex Beach's thrilling oil story is to be the chief feature uf fhe week at the Maoriland Theatre, , An advance note says: "Flowing Gold" is going to give you the thrill of your lives, for it contains a series of hair-raising indents the like of which* you have never 'before <witoeesed on the screen." Chief of ■"' these is the iburning of an oil well, set afire by a stroke of lightning. You \yill see the holt strike the top of the derrick, igniting the gushing fluid; a sudden iblurst of flame which illuminates the 'entire neighbourhood; trie Ibuirsting of a dam, which carries the hiua'ning oil far and wide, the trapping off the hero and heroine opa the top of a shack which is being carried along by the surging and the overturning of the shack, plunging ,the couple into the sea of flames. Those are the highlights of a. story swell as only Rex Beach could write. It H gripping entertainment from start to finish, and is the type of picture which carries an appeal to all. It is a dramatic masterpiece which it,, will fee impossible to erase from "the memory, and one that all should see.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19251208.2.14

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Shannon News, 8 December 1925, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
364

MAORILAND THEATRE. Shannon News, 8 December 1925, Page 3

MAORILAND THEATRE. Shannon News, 8 December 1925, Page 3

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