TIVOLI AND RIALTO
“ISLE OF LOST SHIPS" No producer lias dared to be so imaginative and succeeded in being Jikewise so strikingly realistic and convincing as the producers of “The Isle of Lost Ships” since the time that company sponsored “The Lost World.” That explains, perhaps, why this picture, which is now at both the Tivoli Theatre, Kuranguli.ipe Load, and the Rialto Theatre, Newmarket, is so refreshing and thrilling. It takes a very striking romantic and dramatic situation, shipwrecks all the characters and plunges them into the world’s still unexplored, enigmatic region—the Sargossa Sea. Ror Virgina Valli, Jason Robnrds and Robert O'Connor the Sargossa Sea proves to be inhabited. There’s a little colony there under the rule of an ex-whaling ship captain, portrayed by Noah. Beery. Fifty men and two women make up the colony.. While the story is sweepingl.v imaginative it is based upon scientific fact. For this reason it is more likely to intrigue and entertain every sort of person. At both theatres the second attraction is “Money,” a charming musical story starring Nancy Carroll.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1046, 9 August 1930, Page 14
Word Count
177TIVOLI AND RIALTO Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1046, 9 August 1930, Page 14
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