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Show TAZIL' ONE OF FILM TREATS TO BE SEEN HERE Beauty, romance and action make "Fazil." Fox picture which opens Sunday-Monday at the Ri-voli Ri-voli theater, one of the film treats of the year. Charles Farrell and Greta Nissen are the featured players. The production was directed di-rected by Howard Hawks. Fazil. an Arab tribal prince, is sent to Venice on a diplomatic mission mis-sion and falls madly in love with) Fabienne, a French girl. He sweeps her off her feet with his ardent love-making. Their happy honeymoon honey-moon is spent in Paris, but before long, his inborn prejudice leads him to object to her freedom with other men and when she refuses to wreck a love romance for Car-and Car-and returns to the desert. Beautiful and delightful as Irene Rich is, Carroll Nye is suspicious of any interest she displays in him. For the second time in the course of a few months Miss Rich sought t owreck a love romance for Carroll. Car-roll. The young actor is hoping this unpleasant attention to his love affairs af-fairs will not become a habit. Happily, Hap-pily, it is make-believe only. I Miss Rich's latest attempt to thwart Dan Cupid's plans for Mr. Nye occurs in "Craig's Wife," which will be shown at the Rivoli theater on Wednesday and Thursday Thurs-day next. As the mercenary Mrs. Craig, Miss Rich tries to persuade her younger sister, played by Virginia Vir-ginia Eradford; of the folly of a moneyless marriage with the young professor, who is portrayed by Nye. Once before, in "Powder My Back," the charming Irene interfered seriously ser-iously with Carroll's romance and all but wrecked it. When "Beau Broadway" comes Tuesday to the Rivoli theater, a startling likeness to Gene Tunney, heavyweight champion, will be seen in Hugh Trevor, who plays the part of a cultured prize-fighter in the new Lew Cody-Aileen Pringle co-starring production. Trevor was cast for the important import-ant role by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer because he was the "Tunney type" although he had never been a boxer box-er outside of college amateur , events. The young actor showed the advantage ad-vantage of his college athletics when he appeared in the slashing fight scenes with Ernie Owens, heavyweight contender, as his opponent. op-ponent. Don Coleman, the Pathewestern star, is again repeating the brilliant bril-liant success he has achieved since becoming a star. His third and latest screen play is "The Black Ace," by Ford I. Beebe with direction direc-tion by Leo Maloney. The Rivoli theater is showing this feature Saturday. Sat-urday. The plot construction of "The Black Ace" is peculiar in that it is more like a four-cornered square than the conventional three-cornered triangle. As a rule, the tri-angl tri-angl eis two men and one woman or two women and one man, but in "The Black Ace" all four are men. The leading woman, Jeanette Loff, does not enter into the melodramatic melodra-matic action. |