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The Blue Mountains Mystery

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Cinematography
  
Arthur Higgins

Story by
  
Harrison Owen

The Blue Mountains Mystery httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb2

Directed by
  
Raymond Longford Lottie Lyell

Produced by
  
Dan Carroll E.J. Carroll

Written by
  
Raymond Longford Lottie Lyell

Based on
  
novel The Mount Marunga Mystery by Harrison Owen

Starring
  
Marjorie Osborne John Faulkner

Initial release
  
5 November 1921 (Australia)

Directors
  
Lottie Lyell, Raymond Longford

Cast
  
Agnes Vernon, John Faulkner, Marjorie Osborne, Ivy Shilling, John De Lacey, Vivian Edwards, Redmond Barry, Billy Williams

Screenplay
  
Lottie Lyell, Raymond Longford

Producers
  
E. J. Carroll, Dan Carroll

Similar
  
The Bushwhackers, The Fatal Wedding, The Midnight Wedding, The Man They Could Not Hang

The Blue Mountains Mystery is a lost 1921 Australian silent film directed by Raymond Longford and co-directed by Lottie Lyell. The film was derived from the 1919 novel The Mount Marunga Mystery by Harrison Owen. It is considered a lost film.

Contents

Plot

The Blue Mountains Mystery involves the alleged murder of a wealthy businessman, Henry Tracey, and the eventual discovery that the victim was an underworld look-alike impersonator. The main suspects are Tracey's ward, Pauline, Mrs Tracey, and Pauline's boyfriend, Hector, and his rival, Richard Maxim.

Eventually the supposedly dead Henry Tracey reappears and announces that he had been kidnapped. The corpse was Stephen Rodder, a man with a strong resemblance to Tracey.

Cast

  • Marjorie Osborne as Mrs Tracey
  • John Faulkner as Henry Tracey/Stephen Rodder
  • Vivian Edwards as Hector Blunt
  • Bernice Vere as Pauline Tracey
  • Billy Williams as Richard Maxim
  • Redmond Barry as detective
  • John de Lacey as Captain Banks
  • Ivy Shilling as dancer
  • Production

    The movie was mostly filmed in Katoomba, the Blue Mountains and Sydney Harbour, with some studio work at the Carrolls' Palmerston studio in Sydney. The Carrington Hotel and Hydro-Majestic Hotel were featured. Shooting took an unusually long time to complete, in part because of the location work involved.

    Marjorie Osborne was a fashion consultant to the Sydney store of Farmer's, and wife of a wealthy land-owner, Henry Hill Osborne. She unsuccessfully attempted a Hollywood career after making this film.

    It was Longford's third production for E.J. Carroll and the first in which Lyell received a formal co-direction credit. According to the book Australian Cinema: The First 80 Years by Graham Shirley and Brian Adams, the film cost almost double that of The Sentimental Bloke (1919).

    Reception

    The film was popular at the box office in Australia.

    Although now lost, at the time of its release The Blue Mountains Mystery fared well in the United Kingdom, South America and the United States upon its initial release. The London Bioscope wrote of The Blue Mountains Mystery: " …by its restrained acting, shows the force which a story gains in the telling. As a consequence, suspense is held throughout". The reviewer of the Los Angeles Times said the film "will keep you on the edge of your seat to the last fade out."

    Actress Marjorie Osborne was admirable of Lottie Lyell's contributions for The Blue Mountains Mystery. She said of her: "I like brains in a woman, and she has them. Her work on this picture is more on the directing side than the acting. She assists Mr. Longford, and the two of them have plenty of healthy argument when their ideas about a scene are different." The November 1921 edition of the Picture Show magazine also praised Lyell as being "enthusiastic, original, possessing charm and common sense" for her writing of the screenplay.

    Harrison Owen was unimpressed with the film, which he thought poorly made compared to overseas movies.

    The Carrolls withdrew from production after this film and concentrated on distribution and exhibition.

    References

    The Blue Mountains Mystery Wikipedia