RIALTO AND REGENT, EPSOM
“THE RINGER” The excellent double-feature programme which has delighted patrons cf the Rialto (Newmarket) and Regent (Epsom) Theatres this week will be screened for the last time this evening. The chief attraction is the exciting film version of Edgar Wallace’s famous thriller, “The Ringer,” which was presented in Auckland as a play by Maurice Moscovitch some time ago. It tells the story of revenge by' a master criminal, who is credited with ability' to “ring the changes” on his disguses and personal appearance. The second big feature is “A Man's Man,” the latest and breeziest film by the inimitable William Haines.
At British International Harry* Lachman is very busy' on an exquisite Wessex cottage exterior. A couple of docile pigeons cooed on the thatched roof and rose pergolas flanked a delightful old-world country garden. Marguerite Allan and John Batten had an idyllic window interlude. Nigel Barrie, who has an important semi-heavv part in “Under the Greenwood Tree,” tells me that the dialect is not being overstressed in the talking sequences. "Under the Greenwood Tree” will be released by Cinema Art Films.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 807, 30 October 1929, Page 16
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185RIALTO AND REGENT, EPSOM Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 807, 30 October 1929, Page 16
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