A History Of Film Exhibition And Reception In Colonial Hong Kong: 1897 To 1925
Displaying 661 - 666 of 666
661
Headline: The Coronet
Newspaper Source: Hong Kong Telegraph
Publication Date: 1925-07-27 - 1925-07-27
Summary:

Today at all shows, Reginald Denny in 'The Fast Worker.' Also Christy [sic] comedy and British Gazette. Tomorrow for two days only, 'Potash and Perlmutter.'

662
Headline: The Coronet
Newspaper Source: South China Morning Post
Publication Date: 1925-07-27 - 1925-07-27
Summary:

Today at all shows, Reginald Denny in 'The Fast Worker,' Christie Comedy and British Gazette. Tomorrow, for two days only, the greatest comedy success of the age, 'Potash and Perlmutter.'

663
Headline: The Coronet
Newspaper Source: The China Mail
Publication Date: 1925-07-27 - 1925-07-27
Summary:

Today at all shows, Reginald Denny in 'The Fast Worker.' Also Christy [sic] Comedy and British Gazette. Tomorrow for two days only, 'Potash and Perlmutter.'

664
Newspaper Source: South China Morning Post
Publication Date: 1925-09-21 - 1925-09-21
Summary:

Today only, D. W. Griffith presents his great spectacular drama, 'The Fall of Babylon,' being the Babylonian scenes from 'Intolerance' with additions, with a wonderful cast includes Seena Owen, Constance Talmadge, Tully Marshall, Elmer Clifton, Alfred Paget and Elmo Lincoln.…

665
Newspaper Source: South China Morning Post
Publication Date: 1925-12-07
Summary:

The following is from St. John Cathedral Notes: We had decided to make a reply to Professor Forster's criticisms of the cinema before we had read them. It must be admitted that the cinema gives us a stock of outrageous unreality. The dollar, moreover, is represented in most film stories as…

666
Newspaper Source: South China Morning Post
Publication Date: 1925-12-29
Summary:

(By H. W. R. to the S. C. M. Post) When the time comes to write the story of the rise of the moving picture there will, I believe, be found two names that will 'lead the rest;' those of Charles Chaplin and D. W. Griffith. David Wark Griffith has been called the Dickens of the screen.…