EMPIRE
“WOLF FANGS” ‘ Thunder,” a champion in his class of police dogs and one of the most intelligent dogs on the screen, is thr* star in “Wolf Fangs,” now showing at the Empire Theatre. “Wolf Fangs” is the story of the regeneration of a puppy whelped among the wolves, who rises through his superior intelligence to the leader of the pack. Through some hidden sense he recognises vaguely Ellen, nj,ece of on© of the herders, and in protecting her turns against his pack and comes back into his own domain. Besides “Thunder,” three trained dog actors and thirty trained dog “extras" were taken to the northernmost part of Oregon to make the picture. Th« scenery is beautiful and the plot is extremely well worked out. Charles Morton, Caryl Lincoln. James Gordon and Frank Rice ars the human actors in the cast. A humorous Irish-Jewish story is the second feature. “The Shamrock and Rose,” starring Edmund Burns, Hasbrouck and Mack sSwaiiv
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 383, 18 June 1928, Page 15
Word Count
160EMPIRE Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 383, 18 June 1928, Page 15
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