Word: goldwyn
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...There is a crying need for college men to enter moving pictures," said Samuel Goldwyn, motion picture producer of note, to a CRIMSON reporter yesterday afternon...
...college man," Mr. Goldwyn continued, "but I wish I had a college education. The college man of today is the smartest member of the population. Ask him or any one else. But he cannot know everything. He never realizes how much he doesn't know until he gets to be about forty...
When questioned as to the effect which movies had on college men, and whether they should attend them, Mr. Goldwyn replied, "I only wish that more of the college men of today would see the movies. The drama is recognized as being the greatest way to put across ideas, and is one of the greatest mediums of education. The drama of the screen is viewed by hundreds of millions of people, a very small percentage of whom have developed the powers of absorption. Many moving pictures of today contain a portrayal of life as it is lived. The perception...
...question of the current claim that German pictures are superseding the American as the best produced, Mr. Goldwyn stated, "Nine tenths of the pictures shown in Germany come over from this country. If was in Germany last year, and the German producers were clamoring to have the American films barred, so that their productions could have some show...
...iron worker on the dizzy girders. He was a millionaire in disguise. But a millionaire can fall off a narrow steel beam as fast as the next man. The picture made its point. Richard Dix is acceptable as the young man. Frances Howard, who recently married Samuel Goldwyn amid excited publicity, seemed rather slight and spiritless. The Talker. This ponderous project indicates that, even if a woman must yearn for a career, she must not talk about it around the family fireside. This wife talked and put bad ideas into one young lady's head which...