OCR Text |
Show 'TRAIL OF 98' IS FEATURE FILERIVOLI A picture of powerful appeal, great magnitude, brilliant acting, flawless direction. That is a. terse description of "The Trail of '98," the big Metro-Cohlwyn-Mayer film epic which (i,i in-, at the Kivoli theater Wednesday Wednes-day and Thursday. Ralph Forbes, Dolores Del Rio, Harry Carey,. Kail Dane, Tully Mai shall, George Cooper! All stand out. in the gigantic cast of fifty which was assembled to portray the characters in this great film-story. Clarence Brown, who directed "Klesh and the Devil," "The Goose Woman," and a dozen other film masterpieces, proves he Is an ace director by his marvelous direction of "The Trail of 'J8." A pen can't any more describe this picture than n pen could describe the Klondike gold rush. You will have to see it yourself and thfrn see it again! OOOOO! Ooooo-o-o-o-o-o! "The Last Warning" is at the Rivoli theater Sunday and Monday, with Laura La Plante in the starring role. It is a riot from start to finish. All the ghostly things that can hap-nen hap-nen do hiinuen in this greatest of mystery photoplays. For sheer sus-jtt-ase this is me finest piece of art the director, Paul Leni, has ever turned out. It surpasses "The Cat and the Canary." If you missed his former directorial vehicle you shouldn't miss this. But if you saw "The Cat and the Canary" you ne'ed no bidding to see "The Last Warning." An exceptional cast of screen celebrities will be seen in the leading lead-ing rols of "Noisy Neighbors," a new Pathe Production which opens a one-day engagement at the Rivoli theater on Saturday next. Headed by Eddie Quillan and Alberta Vaughn in the principal parts this attraction brings to the fore Theodore Theo-dore Roberts, Jane Keckley, Russell Simpson and the entire Quillan family of vaudeville fame. The' building of the first transcontinental transcon-tinental telegraph line, one of the most romantic pages in American history, has mecn translated to the screen in The Overland Telegraph, Tim McCoy's latest Metro Gbjdwyn-Mayer Gbjdwyn-Mayer picture, which will open at the Rivoli theater Tuesday. Much of the film was made amid the gorge'ous scenery of Glacier National Na-tional purk in Wyoming. Dorothy Janis, herself descended from the Cherokee Indian tribe, plays the heroine, while the" villain is enacted " by Lawford Davidson, and Frank Ricft supplies the comedy. A tribe of 450 Blackfeet Indians aided in the making of the new production. Ranger, the' popular FBO police dog, .may truthfully be said to be one of the most beautiful and intelligent in-telligent canine stars the screen j has ever see'n. While he is still a ' young dog, his work improves in every picture. Hf! latest, "The Law of Fear," which opens Friday night at the Rivoli theater, is undoubtedly un-doubtedly not only Ranger's best but by far the most interesting dog picture shown in this town for some time. |