WORLD’S PICTURES.
“GINGER MICK”
“Ginger Mick” as a character is as great a favourite as “The Sentimental Bloke" and in many instances is more firmly established in the imagination of Vis admirers. He is considered to bo more rugged, more forceful, more primitive in his passions and his methods, and owing largely to the big heart con'•calcd under his rough exterior a more lovable character in many ways. The •cones open on the farm at Berry then move on to Sydney, and alternate thereafter from Gallipoli to Australia. “Ginger Mick” is of course the dominating character. Untrained in morals or manners, launched into life with only his emotions for a guide, his better self needs a good deal of rousing, but in “Hick's" case, faithfully and excellently portrayed in the picture, the war serves as a fire by which the gold is refined. The final scones of the film, being natural and human’, have a most impressive elTcct upon the audience. Box plan at the Town Clerk’s olficc.
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Bibliographic details
Patea Mail, Volume XLIV, 23 July 1920, Page 3
Word Count
168WORLD’S PICTURES. Patea Mail, Volume XLIV, 23 July 1920, Page 3
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