Word: arliss
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...apparatus nowadays records just what is spoken in the way it is spoken with a high average of measured accuracy, and individual words are no difficulty. However, often adjustments of various kinds have to be made to counteract individual peculiarities of voice or inflection. On our own lot: George Arliss' sibilants are especially strong. Richard Barthelmess' vowels have a tubby-throaty effect. When Kay Francis says tomowow, wobber, twouble, however, we must record it that way. FREDERIC MACALPIN...
...Working Man (Warner). John Reeves (George Arliss) of Reeves Shoe Co. is a testy old tycoon; when his nephew and general manager implies that his days of usefulness are over, he takes himself fishing in a rage, runs into the two addle-headed children of his recently deceased industrial rival, Hartland. At first, Reeves plans to diddle the Hartland heirs out of their shoe factory. Presently he changes his mind; it pleases him better to get himself appointed their guardian under a pseudonym, make them help him build up their plant. This adds to their self-respect and diminishes...
...foster-father, George Arliss is to be preferred to Maurice Chevalier (see above) on several counts. Instead of sticking out his under lip and singing, he pulls down his upper lip and speaks, in a dry tone, with perfect diction. Chevalier's picture emphasizes the good effects of dissipation; the lesson in the Arliss cinema is about the advantages of sobriety and the respect which children owe their elders. The Working Man, like most Arliss vehicles. has charm as well as respectability; if Mr. Arliss is too definitely of the old school. Bette Davis is certainly of a different...
With his voluntary abdication from a mythical throne in Central Europe, Arliss is forced with either remaining faithful to his queen or returning to the wife he left in order to be king. Off hand, it looks like a set-up for the girl of his youth, but she's changed, you see, and then with no place to worry about, the queen begins to develop a new personality. It's an interesting problem in human nature to which Arliss provides the most satisfactory kind of solution...
Returning to "The King's Vacation" It may be described as an Arliss Success adequately supported by jazz and symphony orchestras, newsreels, and organ, and a dance hall...