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1920 film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robbery Under Arms is a 1920 Australian film directed by Kenneth Brampton and financed by mining magnate Pearson Tewksbury.[4] It is an early example of the "Meat pie Western".[5]
Robbery Under Arms | |
---|---|
Directed by | Kenneth Brampton |
Written by | Kenneth Brampton |
Based on | novel by Rolf Boldrewood |
Produced by | Pearson Tewksbury |
Starring | Kenneth Brampton S.A. Fitzgerald |
Cinematography | Lacey Percival |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Union Theatres |
Release date |
|
Running time | 53 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Languages | Silent English intertitles |
Budget | £3,000 |
Box office | £16,000[3] |
Two brothers, Dick and Jim Marsden, become involved with the bushranger, Captain Starlight. They romance two girls, work on the goldfields, and are captured by the police after Starlight is shot dead.[6]
There had been several attempts to make films based on Rolfe Boldrewood's 1888 novel since the bushranging ban by the New South Wales government in 1912. In particular there were attempts by Stanley Crick in 1916 and Alfred Rolfe in 1918. However Kenneth Brampton managed to secure permission for this 1920 version, mostly likely because it stressed the moral lessons of the story.[7]
Kenneth Brampton and actress Tien Hogue managed to persuade the mining magnate Pearson Tewksbury to raise the budget and act as producer.[3]
Brampton was acting in the play Lightnin' which he left to make the film.[8]
The film was shot on location at Braidwood and in the Araluen Valley near Canberra. The bushrangers the Clarke brothers reportedly worked in this region.[9][10]
Renowned horseman "Top" Hassall doubled for Brampton on the horse riding scenes.[11]
Future director Charles Chauvel was working around the Sydney studios and attending to horses on the film. He has a bit part.
The film was the final acting role for Roy Redgrave who died in 1922.
The movie was reportedly successful at the box office[7] and grossed up to £16,000. However returns were so slow and the distributor and exhibitor took so much that Pearson Tewksbury was dissuaded from further film production.[3]
Variety said the film was "of only fair quality, the picture just gets by."[12]
A "copy comprising about three-quarters of the film" was found and combined with already known footage to produce a near-complete version.[13] A five-minute sequence is still missing.[13]
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