EVERYBODY’S
“THE ISLE OF HOPE” The venturesome Dick Talmadge gets himself into more trouble than a soap salesman in Soviet Russia during the flashing action of “The Isle of Hope,” his latest release which is now being shown at Everybody’s Theatre. With nothing but a fire on shipboard, a mutiny of his crew, a sunken vessel, a shipwreck on a desert island, a beautiful girl who lives alone in a ruined old castle, a pirate’s treasure stored in the dungeons, and plenty of fighting, Dick is an idle young man suffering from sleeping sickness. The scorching adventures of a Conrad and a Robert Louis Stevenson combined seem to have been wrapped up by James Bell Smith, who wrote the story, and delivered to director Jack Nelson for development.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume 1, Issue 101, 20 July 1927, Page 15
Word Count
128EVERYBODY’S Sun (Auckland), Volume 1, Issue 101, 20 July 1927, Page 15
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