AMUSEMENTS.
MARTON-FRIDAY. “THE PAGAN GOD.”
One of the gorgeous settings in. “The Pagan God” is a Chinese garden. The producers secured permission from the owner of on© of the most wonderful Chinese gardens in California to use it for the screen. This gripping drama cf the Mongolian conspiracy, with A B Warner admirably cast as an American diplomat, Bruce Winthrop, has a thrilling climax. The conspirators have captured Bruce when they find that he is in possession of their secret idol, and are just about to strangle him, when he succeeds in reaching his gun, shoots out the light, and after a desperate battle fights his way to the window of the secret room and escapes One of the best of Exhibitor’s Mutual screen productions. Still-hunting for Chinese revolutionaries is a dangerous game, but H B Warner, in the guise of Bruce Winthrop, an American diplomat, shows in “The Pagan God,” how to beat the Oriental as his own game.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/RAMA19200527.2.53
Bibliographic details
Rangitikei Advocate and Manawatu Argus, Volume XLV, Issue 12063, 27 May 1920, Page 8
Word Count
160AMUSEMENTS. Rangitikei Advocate and Manawatu Argus, Volume XLV, Issue 12063, 27 May 1920, Page 8
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