AMUSEMENTS.
BERNARD'S PICTURES. Last niglil’s mnv series ol »uir pic• tares ;u xieruard’s 1. neat-re received groat ova lion I'rom a l airly large audicuco. 'I lie programme presented was a brilliant series, each film standing alone as some ol tlie finest work in picturedoin. The star ieature by the Yitagraph Co., entitled “J he Strength of Men/’ is carried out in a lavisii style. The plot, which is adapten 1/om Rex Beache’s novel, '‘The iron
Trail,” pourlrays very fine acting amidst calm Canadian landscape and destructive hush fires, in which each scene is vividly depicted and is one of the greatest, sensational and trne-to-life dramatic (Studies yet taken by the Kino camera. “The Well - ’ is a striking and forceful A.B. drama. A large irrigation well was among a farmer’s new acquisitions, and in this his designing helpers left him prisoner, while they look his wealth and his daughter. There is an old saying, however, that an evil purpose always defeats its end hy some committing act. The Gaumout Graphic is as usual full of current topics. The seenics are at their best in Rathe’s colored ficones in France, whilst the comics are screamers. Friday’s change will feature another 2000 ft. Vitagraph drama of love and life—women’s ways and women’s wiles—entitled “The Web,” a most thrilling, sensational, and realistic dramagraph. Also Selig’s great animal picture, “Arabia, the Equine Detective.”
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Bibliographic details
Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVII, Issue 56, 6 November 1913, Page 8
Word Count
229AMUSEMENTS. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVII, Issue 56, 6 November 1913, Page 8
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