THE TALKIES.
“DYNAMITE.” OPENING TO-MORROW NIGHT. Cecil De Mille, in his first all-talking masterpiece, “Dynamite,” has woven suspense, action, and drama with a gripping story as only De Mille can. A society heiress weds a man who is to die seven hours later* for murder. Then she buys another woman’s husband for £20,000. You will ask yourself, “Is there Dynamite in a stolen kiss?” “Is there Dynamite' in the lax moral code of the rich?” Mere words are inadequate to express the magriiture of this production. You must follow it through all its wonders to the climax, where two men and a woman are trapped in a mine tunnel —a mile underground. “Dynamite” is aptly named; it is a blast of human emotions, and gives Kay Johnstone, Conrad Nagel,Julia Faye and Charles Bickford wonderful scope to show their dramatic talents. As the booking plans are rapidly filling, intending patrons should book their seats immediately.
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Bibliographic details
Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXXI, Issue 5595, 4 July 1930, Page 5
Word Count
154THE TALKIES. Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXXI, Issue 5595, 4 July 1930, Page 5
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